Enter Your Reply The Comment You're Replying To Joe Joyce wrote on Sat, Sep 27, 2008 10:53 PM UTC:George, that's a very interesting idea of nominating 3 designs, one each on 3 board sizes. To start, for 2009 you've nominated:''Maura's Modern Chess 9x9 (with Bishop conversion), Winther's Mastodon Chess 8x10,and Duniho's Eurasian Chess 10x10''. So let's take a look at them. Maura's Modern 9x9 I think I'd like this better as a 9x8 for 'the next chess'; the pawns don't work right with an odd number of squares between them, for orthodox chess players. I'm not panning the game at all; it looks quite interesting. I've played a few games where the pawns were an odd number of rows apart. This changes the entire feel of the opening; there is more pawn maneuver and the placement of minor pieces in the center is more awkward. It adds another bit of piece shuffling to the opening phase. This isn't bad; it forces players to think about pawn placement, and where and how to situate a knight, say. This accomplishes a real goal of trashing the opening book, something a variantist looks for, but this is not necessarily what will make the orthodox happy. This looks like a very nice game. The added piece, the BN, is less strong-feeling than either the RN or the RB, although HG Muller seems to have demonstrated the rough equivalence of the 3 pieces. The bishop adjustment rule is a nice kludge [as Fergus Duniho has defined kludges in his recently referenced paper], bringing another opening book-killing feature, a bit of non-symmetric random chess. All in all, this seems a very nice game [not having played it, I cannot comment directly; having played similar, I can comment a bit], but it feels like one that variantists would like more than the orthodox would. It's a very nice, close to chess game, but with enough significant differences, I suspect, to prevent its being adopted as ... hmm, call it a chess equal by the orthodox. The variantists should in general like this, and this sort of, game. Edit Form You may not post a new comment, because ItemID NextChess does not match any item.