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A web-based implementation of the Hanabi board game.

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Senko

Project "Senko" is a web-based implementation of the Hanabi board game.

Online Demo

The frontend uses TypeScript, Stylus, Mithril, Rxjs, and Material Design.

The backend features a serverless design using Firestore as the database, with game rules validated entirely with Firebase Security Rules.

Features

  • Basic gaming with 2-6 players + observers.
  • Creating and joining rooms.
  • Visual gameplay and layout.
  • Extensive in-game hints and "insights", e.g.
    • Possible color / ranks of unknown cards
    • Copies left of a certain card
  • Configurable rulesets
    • 5/6 colors
    • Wildcard (rainbow) cards (EXPERIMENTAL, in-game description has errors)
    • Unicorn Unique color (which has only one copy of each rank)

Wishlist

  • Ending the game one round after deck runs out
    • Right now, players can keep playing until they have only one card in hand.
    • Ideally, the end-game condition should be configurable.
    • Perfecting the game and too-many-errors are correctly implemented though.
  • Animations
  • Alerts / notifications when it is your turn
  • AI players (e.g. adapters for existing Hanabi algorithms / models)
  • Better mobile support

Development / Contributing

This project is a monorepo managed using Lerna.

To start, install Lerna and bootstrap:

npm i -g lerna
lerna bootstrap

Dev server

The dev server can be started with npm run dev at repo root.

This starts a Webpack server for the web part (./packages/web) and also Firebase emulators for Firestore, Functions, and Auth.

Open http://localhost:8081/ in the browser to access the Webpack dev server. The port is configurable in ./packages/web/webpack.config.js under devServer.port. (Should you run into port conflicts for the Firebase emulators, those can be changed via ./packages/server/firebase.json. Just keep in mind to always visit the Webpack server, NOT the Firebase hosting emulator, in your browser.)

You should now be able to create a new room using the + button on the bottom right corner. To join the room as another player (to play test yourself), you may want to use use a different browser or an incognito / private window.

All front-end changes (TypeScript, Stylus, etc.) should trigger Webpack hot-reload. Changes to the Security Rules should be automatically picked up by the Firestore emulator.

Testing

npm test in ./packages/server should run the tests. These tests are mostly for the security rules (see below).

Security Rules

One unconventional design choice of this project is to implement the full game rules with Firebase Security Rules. Rules enforces that one cannot see their own cards and all moves (hints, plays, and discards) must be valid.

A Cloud Function is still needed for the initial random shuffling of the deck to ensure no player (read: client code) can see the full arrangement of cards. It also handles creation of the initial game state for convenience of implementation. After that, the entire Hanabi game is deterministic and can be expressed in terms of Rules conditions and document lookups.

With that being said, since Rules do not support loops or queries, one need to get creative on expressing the in-game invariants. The Firestore data schema is designed with these constraints in mind and features quirks and de-normalizations as a result.

  • /waitingAreas/{roomId}: pre-game player recruiting and game settings.
  • /rooms/{roomId}: public metadata and rules about each game.
    • Room schema: interface Room in ./packages/types/index.d.ts.
    • /cards/{cardId}: cards in the game with suit/rank and who can see them.
      • The IDs are indexes assigned based on their order in the deck.
      • Moves only references cardIds, ensuring the suit/rank of the cards is kept secret. This enables playing a card without seeing it.
      • shownToUids tracks which users can read the card.
      • Full schema: interface Card in ./packages/types/index.d.ts.
    • /moves/{moveId}: actions taken by players (publicly visible).
      • Immutable once created. IDs are indexes acsending from 0 (init).
      • Contains the type of the action and payload (e.g. play, cardId: 1)
      • Contains stateAfter, a snapshot of the board state after the move.
      • Both the action and stateAfter are validated by extensive rules.
      • Full schema: type Move in ./packages/types/index.d.ts.

The full Rules can be found at ./packages/server/firestore.rules.

When making a move, the client code must create /moves/{moveId} AND update visibility of any /cards/{cardId} (if changed) at the same time using a Firestore batch write. For example, when playing / discarding a card, the revealedByMoveId must be set to the proposed moveId and the shownToUids list must be set to all players. Also, a new card (if available) is drawn for replacement, which must be shown to all players EXCEPT the turn player.

A move must also calculate the stateAfter by delicately making an updated copy of the previous move's stateAfter with changes according to game rules. Hint moves must also indicate which cards match the hint. Since this quickly become complicated, helper functions are created for all types of moves, see ./packages/client/src/actions.ts.

The reading paths are comparably easier, but one must keep in mind that Rules are NOT filters. In other words, the client of a player must read / listen on queries that only returns cards visible to that player instead of the full cards collection. Since information is scattered across multiple collections, a client may see them temporarily out of sync due to timing of listener pushes. In other words, the client need to solve a stream-to-stream JOIN problem. ./packages/client/view.ts handles that gracefully and produces Rxjs Observables with the most up-to-date information.

Licensing

Apache License 2.0.

This project does not contain any material (e.g. graphics or rules text) from the physical version of the Hanabi board game. The project contributors are not in any way affiliated with the artists, designers, or publishers of that game.

This is a personal project maintained using my own spare time and own resources. It is not an officially supported Google product.

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