In this paper we study a family of 2-pile Take Away games, that we denote by
Generalized Diagonal Wythoff Nim (GDWN). The story begins with 2-pile Nim whose
sets of options and P-positions are {{0,t}∣t∈N} and
\{(t,t)\mid t\in \M \} respectively. If we to 2-pile Nim adjoin the
main-\emph{diagonal} {(t,t)∣t∈N} as options, the new game is
Wythoff Nim. It is well-known that the P-positions of this game lie on two
'beams' originating at the origin with slopes Φ=21+5>1
and Φ1<1. Hence one may think of this as if, in the process of
going from Nim to Wythoff Nim, the set of P-positions has \emph{split} and
landed some distance off the main diagonal. This geometrical observation has
motivated us to ask the following intuitive question. Does this splitting of
the set of P-positions continue in some meaningful way if we, to the game of
Wythoff Nim, adjoin some new \emph{generalized diagonal} move, that is a move
of the form {pt,qt}, where 0<p<q are fixed positive integers and t>0? Does the answer perhaps depend on the specific values of p and q? We
state three conjectures of which the weakest form is: limt∈Natbt exists, and equals Φ, if and only if (p,q) is a
certain \emph{non-splitting pair}, and where {{at,bt}} represents the
set of P-positions of the new game. Then we prove this conjecture for the
special case (p,q)=(1,2) (a \emph{splitting pair}). We prove the other
direction whenever q/p<Φ. In the Appendix, a variety of experimental
data is included, aiming to point out some directions for future work on GDWN
games.Comment: 38 pages, 34 figure