P.LI is a two-player majority alignment game developed by Fouyap, played on a 6×6 grid of 36 squares. Each player commands 16 pieces, with a choice of red, black, or white.
The goal is to be the first player to own 4 lines of pieces by majority. Each turn consists of two actions performed in order: an optional first action and a mandatory second action.
A valid line must be complete — six pieces aligned horizontally or vertically with no empty spaces. Owning that line means holding the majority of pieces on it. Ownership is reversible: a won line is underlined, but the marking disappears if ownership changes or the line breaks.
The game ends when one player owns 4 lines, or when all pieces have been placed. If the latter, the player with the most lines wins. The strategic core lies in placing pieces intelligently while disrupting the opponent's lines through diagonal movement, without surrendering your own established positions.
For more two-player board strategy, chess games on Playgama cover a wide range of grid-based competitive titles. Moon Chess shares P.LI's turn-based placement on a compact board where connecting sequences of pieces drives scoring. Chess Pro rewards the same tactical piece manipulation and board control that defines P.LI's competitive structure. Xiangqi: Chinese Chess echoes P.LI's diagonal movement awareness and territory control through careful piece placement across a full board. Broader puzzle games are also worth exploring if the spatial reasoning side of P.LI appeals to you.