Japanese who created the popular Othello board game has died

Takeshi Murakami
In this Aug. 4, 1997, file photo, Takeshi Murakami, the world Othello champion from Tokyo, makes a move during his first game against a computer at the NEC Research Institute Inc. in South Brunswick, N.J. Goro Hasegawa, the Japanese man who created the board game Othello, has died. AP

 

 

TOKYO — Goro Hasegawa, the Japanese man who created the board game Othello, has died. He was 83.

 

Hasegawa died after a long illness Monday in his home in Kashiwa, a Tokyo suburb, said Marie Kimura of the Japan Othello Association, while declining to specify the illness.

 

Hasegawa came up with the idea for the game as a child, when he played with milk-bottle caps. He proposed it to a manufacturer as an adult in 1972.

 

His father, an English literature expert, was behind the name, inspired by Shakespeare’s play because the game uses round pieces — black on one side, white on the other.

 

Since in 1973, 24.75 million Othello sets have been shipped in Japan, not counting online or overseas sales, according to Tokyo-based MegaHouse Corp., which makes Othello. TVJ

 

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