Enter Your Reply The Comment You're Replying To Larry Smith wrote on Fri, Oct 3, 2008 06:15 AM UTC:FIDE has chosen to promote the Mad Queen variant. One of the goals of the organization was to advocate a standard form of play. They could chose to promote something else. Of course the organization is made up of a lot of people who have dedicated their lives to the Mad Queen variant, and they will be highly reluctant to place all that effort in jeopardy if they had to compete with a new form of play. If FIDE does not adapt, little by little they will discover that their tournaments are slowly becoming irrelevant. And simply 'fixing' the Mad Queen variant will not be sufficient. And since the rise of the video game, board games have seen a decrease among the general public. (It would be interesting to see the actual sales figures for the last twenty years, though CCGs might have countered any loss.) So, the expectation of the popular rise of a New Chess will not be easily realized. It will take a large organization, with a large advertising budget, to create the necessary trend in the short run. The superiority of the game will need to be demonstrated by highly ranked and popular Mad Queen players(and what's in it for them?). Is anyone here ready to publicly challenge a Grandmaster to a game of their favorite variant? (I have the image of a masked woodpusher screaming challenges at the camera.) It would be best if they were able to actually win the chosen game. Edit Form You may not post a new comment, because ItemID NextChess does not match any item.