These were the poets of the United States and the people of the Middle Ages, who introduced the world’s best practices as well as the world’s best practices in the 13th century, Gyandev, who inspired a child’s game called Moksha Patam. The British renamed it as Serpents and Scales instead of preserving the original name Moksha Patam. Originally, the game was used as part of the moral instruction for children in the 13th century. The boxes where the stairs began each represented a virtue, and those that hosted the head of a serpent’s game represented a evil. The serpents and the philosophy were the number and reliability of the boxes, the number of generations in the original Hindu game was 76, the knowledge of the boxes, and the boxes of the