Believed to be one of the oldest games in the world, chaupad is said to have undone many a man in its time. Yet, it was not until historian Abul Fazl came along that it came to be immortalised. In the first known record of the game, Fazl claims that chaupad was a popular gambling sport at the court of Mughal Emperor Akbar in Fatehpur Sikri in the 16th century. So addicted was Akbar to the game that he had flagstones laid out here to play it the way only emperors can, by using peopleas pawns. Chaupad is known by many namespachisi in North India, thayakattam in Tamil Nadu and pagade in Karnataka. The game is also known to have been played in the Indus Valley in 2,300 BCE as is attested by the oblong dice that have been recovered from its sites.