Terhüchü is a two-player abstract strategy board game from Nagaland in Northeast India and is played by the Angami Naga ethnic group.
The game was documented as Terhüchü by John Henry Hutton in The Angami Nagas, With Some Notes on Neighboring Tribes (1921).
As in alquerque, pieces can move and capture in any available direction at any time during the game following the pattern of the board.
Terhüchü is related to sixteen soldiers, peralikatuma, and Kotu Ellima which are also from the Indian subcontinent.
In the beginning of the game, the pieces are placed similarly to that of alquerque except only one piece from each player occupies the middle row (also known as the common third rank of each player) and they are placed on the outermost points leaving three vacant points at the beginning of the game.