Burma (Myanmar) In
Myanmar (Burma), the tug of war, called (; ) has both cultural and historical origins. It features as an important ritual in , the ceremonial cremation of high-ranking
Buddhist monks, whereby the funerary pyres are tugged between opposite sides. The tug of war is also used as a traditional
rainmaking custom, called (; ), to encourage rain. The tradition originated during the reign of King Shinmahti in the
Bagan Era. The
Rakhine people also hold tug of war ceremonies called () during the Burmese month of
Tabodwe.
Indonesia In
Indonesia, is a popular sport held in many events, such as the
Indonesian Independence Day celebration, school events, and scout events. The rope used is called , made from fibers of between two jousters. Two
cinder blocks are placed a distance apart and the two jousters stand upon the blocks with a rope stretched between them. The objective for each jouster is to either a) cause their opponent to fall off their block, or b) to take their opponent's end of the rope from them.
Japan In
Japan, the is a staple of school sports festivals. The tug of war is also a traditional way to pray for a plentiful harvest throughout Japan and is a popular ritual around the country. The Kariwano Tug of war in
Daisen, Akita, is said to be more than 500 years old, and is also a national folklore cultural asset. The Underwater Tug of War Festival in
Mihama, Fukui, is 380 years old, and takes place every January. The Sendai Great Tug of War in
Satsumasendai, Kagoshima is known as or . Around 3,000 men pull a huge rope which is long. The event is said to have been started by feudal warlord Yoshihiro Shimadzu, with the aim of boosting the morale of his soldiers before the decisive
Battle of Sekigahara in 1600. Nanba Hachiman Jinja's tug of war, which started in the
Edo period, is
Osaka's folklore cultural asset.
Ryukyu Islands August festivals often feature a communal tug-of-war using a giant fiber rope that can often take days to weave. The
Naha Tug-of-war is famous. The rope in Naha is over 200m long and weighs more than 40 metric tons.
Korea (, also ) is a traditional
Korean sport similar to tug of war. It has a ritual and divinatory significance for many agricultural communities in the country and is performed at festivals and community gatherings. The sport uses two huge rice-straw ropes, connected by a central peg, which is pulled by teams representing the East and West sides of the village (the competition is often rigged in favor of the Western team). A number of religious and traditional rituals are performed before and after the actual competition.
New Zealand A variant, originally brought to New Zealand by Boston whalers in the 1790s, is played with five-person teams lying down on cleated boards. The sport is played at two clubs in Te Awamutu and Hastings, supported by the New Zealand Tug of War Association. A four-person variant is played at the National Rover Scout Moot.
Peru The Peruvian children's series
Nubeluz featured its own version of tug of war (called ), where each team battled 3-on-3 on platforms suspended over a pool of water. The object was simply to pull the other team into the pool.
Poland In Poland, a
version of tug of war is sometimes played using a
dragon boat, where teams of six or eight attempt to row towards each other.
Basque Country In the
Basque Country, this sport is considered a popular rural sport, with many associations and clubs. In Basque, it is called
Sokatira.
United States In the United States, a form of tug of war using eight handles is used in competition at camps, schools, churches, and other events. The rope is called an "Oct-O Pull" and provides two-way, four-way and eight-way competition for 8 to 16 participants at one time. • Each
Fourth of July, two California towns separated by an ocean channel
Stinson Beach, California and
Bolinas, California gather to compete in an annual tug of war. • The towns of Leclaire, Iowa, and Port Byron, Illinois, compete in a tug of war across the Mississippi River every year in August since 1987 during TugFest. • A special edition of the
Superstars television series, called "The Superteams", features a tug of war, usually as the final event. •
The Battle of the Network Stars featured a tug of war as one of its many events. • A game of tug of war, on tilted platforms, was used on the
US,
UK and
Australian versions of the
Gladiators television series, although the game was played with two sole opposing participants. • The last known "cleated" tug of war, takes place in Tuolumne CA at the annual Tuolumne Lumber Jubilee. It takes place the weekend after Fathers Day.
Miami University Puddle Pull is a biannual tug of war contest held at
Miami University. The event is a timed, seated variation of tug of war in which
fraternities and sororities compete. In addition to the seated participants, each team has a caller who coordinates the movements of the team. Although the university hosted an unrelated freshman vs. sophomores tug of war event in the 1910s and 1920s, the first record of modern Puddle Pull is its appearance as a tug of war event in the school's newspaper,
The Miami Student, in May 1949. This fraternity event was created by Frank Dodd of the Miami chapter of
Delta Upsilon. Originally, the event was held as a standing tug of war over the
Tallawanda stream near the Oxford waterworks bridge in which the losers were pulled into the water. This first event was later seen as a driving force for creating interfraternity competitive activities (Greek Week) at Miami University. As a part of moving to a seated event, a new rule was created in 1966 to prohibit locks and created the event that is seen today with the exception of a large pit that was still being dug in between the two teams. The event is held in a level grass field and uses a diameter rope that is at least long is used for the event. Footholes or "pits" are dug for each participant at intervals. The pits are dug with a flat front and an angled back. Women began to compete sporadically starting in the 1960s and became regular participants as sorority teams in the mid-1980s.
Hope College The Hope College Pull is an annual tug-of-war contest held across the
Black River in
Holland, Michigan on the fourth Saturday after Labor Day. Competitors are 40 members of the freshman and sophomore classes. ==Formal rules==