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 Chess variants (8x8)

including Amazon, Anti, Atomic, Berolina, Corner, Crazy Screen, Cylinder, Dark, Extinction, Fischer Random, Fortress, Horde, Knight Relay, Legan, Loop, Maharajah, Screen, Three Checks

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Community Announcements:
- Nasmichael is helping to co-ordinate the Fischer Random Chess Email Chess (FRCEC) Club and can set up quad or trio games if you send him a PM here.


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17. Syyskuu 2018, 03:24:18
ughaibu 
Otsikko: Ambiguous rule.
In the rules for knightmate chess this is written: following standard castling rules [ ] no square between the knight and the rook may be attacked by an opponent's piece).
But this is not standard. The standard rule is that castling is legal if b1 or b8 is attacked. Is this contravened in knightmate chess?

22. Toukokuu 2011, 19:59:25
ughaibu 
What's the result, in Three Checks Chess, if the third check repeats the position for the third time?

31. Heinäkuu 2008, 21:29:22
ughaibu 
Good point about the knights, but why the exception for kings?

30. Heinäkuu 2008, 08:18:31
ughaibu 
Okay, I see the kings aren't effected at all by knights. Why not??

30. Heinäkuu 2008, 07:11:01
ughaibu 
In knight relay chess can a king give check? If not, why not?

4. Toukokuu 2005, 11:25:30
ughaibu 

11. Joulukuu 2004, 23:41:00
ughaibu 
All normal chess rules apply.

19. Elokuu 2004, 04:41:45
ughaibu 
It's quite different from bughouse as the pieces remain constant unless there are promotions.

28. Kesäkuu 2004, 12:45:35
ughaibu 
Normally if I click a pawn it moves automatically if it only has one available move, so in dark chess to check for possible en passants it wasn't necessary to try the second stage of the move, I only needed to see that the pawn didn't automatically move. Dark chess players should be aware that this is no longer the case (my opponent has just played c6 when I falsely deduced that he must have played c5 on the previous move). We can also select a pawn even if it has no legal move!

28. Joulukuu 2003, 12:30:05
ughaibu 
It's just occured to me that this could be a game if it's played in matches of one with each colour and the aim is to win in the fewest moves, (as black of course).

27. Joulukuu 2003, 20:24:34
ughaibu 
I think it's very unlikely that this is a game in the competitive sense. It seems to me most likely to be a way to introduce complete beginners, probably children, to the moves of the chess pieces. The beginner of course takes black and the teacher white, shogi has a comparable teaching tool in which the beginner has a full set of pieces while the teacher has only a king and three pawns in hand.

19. Marraskuu 2003, 13:31:26
ughaibu 
Shogi is much more aggresive than chess and yes you read correctly. I've been playing shogi for more than 20 years but I've never had a draw.

19. Marraskuu 2003, 13:19:39
ughaibu 
In fact the full story with shogi is that a draw by repetition only occurs if it doesn't involve continuous checks, perpetual check loses for the checker because the draw isn't by mutual intent.

19. Marraskuu 2003, 12:41:00
ughaibu 
Otsikko: Whisperz
In chess the situation is resolved after three repetitions of position with the same side to move, in effect this is a way of avoiding the situation continuing indefinitely. In this case in loop chess the situation will not continue indefinitely so there would be no logic to call such a case a draw. Shogi re-uses captured pieces and has done so for 400 years, this gives shogi a species of seniority for these kind of cases, in shogi the number of pieces must also repeat.

19. Marraskuu 2003, 11:06:04
ughaibu 
A draw that reduces the number of re-usable pieces doesn't make sense.

21. Elokuu 2003, 06:07:39
ughaibu 
The piece you promote to.

15. Elokuu 2003, 07:08:12
ughaibu 
Otsikko: Big Bad Wolf
Thanks.

15. Elokuu 2003, 05:46:27
ughaibu 
Otsikko: Fencer
When I click Jestone's "here" link I get sent to page one http://brainking.com/game/FirstPage

23. Kesäkuu 2003, 19:24:27
ughaibu 
Otsikko: Gaspard
It stays as promoted so be careful.

12. Kesäkuu 2003, 17:43:23
ughaibu 
Otsikko: cm5127
It's an interesting point. With plenty of pieces still on the board I think two checks is usually good value for a piece. One check can go either way so involves delicacy of judgement.

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