Pegs and Jokers is a "race" game played with pegs or marbles, playing cards with Jokers included, and a board containing start and home areas for each player. It is based on an Indian game, Pachisi, with widely popular variations known as Parcheesi, Sorry!, Aggravation, and Trouble. There are multiple descriptions online (https://www.pagat.com/race/pegsandjokers.html is a good place to start) with a wide variety of rules. There are rules for playing with 2 or more players although it is most commonly played with 4 or 6 players in teams of 2 or 3 players.
This model includes pieces that make up the playing board which can vary with the number of players. There are also playing pieces with different designs for each player. A box is also available to store up to 12 board sides meant to be a different color for each player. 5 game pieces are printed for each player also meant to be a different color for each and to match their board side. A tray fits in the box to hold the game pieces. A top fits on top of the box.
A game board side is made up of 2 parts, a straight part and a part containing the start area and home. These 2 parts fit together to make up a game board side. These parts are designed so that the straight part prints top down and the start/home part prints bottom down. There is a 2-part board variation if you would prefer to play with marbles. The marble board design will also work with the playing pieces but they may not be as stable as on the board designed for playing pieces only. Also, marbles tend to fly all over the table when used.
The "pegs", or player pieces are also made in 2 parts. There is a common base used for all player pieces. The common game piece base prints flat side down. There are 12 different designs (crown, heart, swirl, Dollar, hexagon, star, circle, square, triangle, diamond, sphere, pawn) for player pieces which are printed flat and then glued into a common base. 5 pieces are needed for each player.
The main box itself is straight forward. The tray contains 12 compartments for the 12 different game piece designs. There are 3 different tops that can be printed. One is a basic flat top printed top down. Another top has a design in the surface that can be printed top down (to get a rough interior to the design) or at a 45 degree angle with a few easy to remove organic supports (to get a smooth interior to the design). The final top includes a 5-color design which needs to be printed with a Prusa MMU fitted printer, a Prusa XL multi-head printer, or some other multi-material printer set-up.
There are no special print parameters. I used 0.20mm print quality, 0.4 nozzle, no supports (except the 45 degree printed top - see gcode file for example), and 15% infill.
The author marked this model as their own original creation.