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Comments by JaredMcComb
Did you guys get my votes? I sent them in awhile ago.
When I submitted entries to the 44SC contest, I also submitted a third variant, entitled Glacial Shift, which had nothing to do with the contest. I am afraid that in the hubbub of the submission deadline and voting starting, the game was either lost or forgotten about. If necessary I can send it again.
Any opposing piece in a Basilisk's line of sight is frozen, with the exception of the enemy Basilisk. It is possible to freeze up to four pieces simultaneously, none of which have to have the same distance from the Basilisk as any other frozen piece. Basically, any enemy piece a normal Rook couild capture from the Basilisk's square is frozen.
Why not have 7 be the limit, and make a stack of 7 be a King, instead of having a royal stone? (Then you only have one type of piece, making the game much, er, abstracter, as well as adding more strategies!)
Okay, I know this isn't official at the moment, and there's really no point to this, but hey. Chebble Play on a Scrabble board. Each player has four each of Rook, Knightrider, and Bishop in hand, as well as one King. Kings start in opposite corners. Play Scrabble as usual. Before making a play, you must move a chess piece. Scrabble tiles may not be played to an occupied space, and chess pieces may not move through tiles (although Knightriders may leap them). Besides moving, a player may spend points they have accumulated to drop a piece adjacent to their King. It costs 10 points to drop a Knightrider, 20 points to drop a Bishop, and 30 points to drop a Rook. It costs double or triple points to drop on a premium square, depending on the premium (double word or letter costs double, triple word or letter costs triple). You may not drop a piece into a position from which it immediately gives check. Kings may remain in check, but cannot be mated. Instead, a player receives a point bonus for each piece of theirs checking their opponent's King at the end of their turn. You receive 5 points for checking with a Knightrider, 10 points for checking with a Bishop, and 15 points for checking with a Rook. Any checking piece on a letter premium square receives an appropriate multiplier which is applied to its checking bonus. Any checking piece on a word premium square similarly multiplies all checking pieces. It is of course possible to have a checking piece have its own multiplier as well as one or more other multipliers granted it by other checking pieces. Play ends when the game of Scrabble is over, after which the player with the highest score wins.
When did that happen? Did I miss a news post or something? And why did it happen?
I would like to make a nomination for Courier chess. This game is an interesting look at the historical development of the modern game of chess, as it includes both the archaic and modern forms of the bishop, and contains the Ferz rather than a modern Queen, thus suggesting that the modern Bishop's move was 'invented' first. In addition, according to these pages' entry for the game, the game was played widely throughout Germany during the Middle Ages, although it later died out (in favor of the modern game, I would assume). The game is very playable and would make a sensible addition to the Recognized list, in my opinion.
If I were to reconstruct the game based on the material given, I would have assumed it would differ from the rules presented on this page in two ways: Rather than cannons, there would be two rooks. The rook is a piece which is found in every historical game to date, and there is no reason which a piece that 'resembles a castle' shouldn't be one. The knight would not be able to move one space orthogonally (this might be the result of an inaccurate diagram on Kisljuk's part, however). As for the pawn move, since no information is really given, either a Shogi or a Changgi interpretation would work, although the latter probably makes for a more playable game. --Jared
The crystals are called gyullahs, and gold ones are worth 20, not 30. Also the pawns are called gulleds.
Thanks for clearing that up, Fergus. I would also like to point out that Fergus did previously state that new CVs would be added to the RCV list, but on a 'less frequent' than monthly basis. We're not just throwing everything we like on this list.
I, too, think Fergus's idea is excellent. I also think that 'time-testedness' is a perfectly good word, and wish I could find more opportunities in which to use it.
I agree that Changgi should be on the Classic list. Maybe Makruk and/or Sittuyin as well?
It seems to me that Courier Chess has been ommitted from the group of games which can be voted for. Unless this was intentional, I suggest we throw out the current votes and start again with it included.
It seems to me that this concept was taken by Christian Freeling and adapted to fit Grand Chess, where it works almost as well.
What happened to Dai-Ryu Shogi? I submitted it several weeks ago...
The assumption by the unnamed individual is correct. Also, a link to Ryu Shogi where it is referenced in the rules would be a very good idea. Also, I will not be renaming any pieces in this variant. See, I had this thing called a THEME going.
I had actually thought about that, but eventually decided against it. As it is, the Knights/L.D.s are still the only leaping piece, and besides, I think I've already added enough power to the original Ryu setup with the Platinum Generals/Dragons.
As stated directly in the moves section: 'As a general rule, the promoted forms of pieces retain the movement powers of their third-zone unpromoted counterparts.' In other words, promotion does not change the third-zone move so much as it changes the domain of the move by extending it back to the first two zones. This also happens to apply to Dai-Ryu.
The board is not actually spherical, but rather is a torus with a half-twist.
All the same, it would be nice to see who did. If you don't wish to disclose the information, though, why not just come out and say so? I would assume BWII wasn't disqualified and was in fact not voted for well, due to a bad case of rehash disease. I honestly don't know what came over me.
Would it be possible to create a printer-friendly version of this page, without all the links and stuff? I just got a set for Christmas (yay!) and I'd like to keep a copy of the rules with me.
Roberto: I actually got it from my mother, who ordered a board and a set of wooden pieces from www.yutopian.com. It's not too bad of a set, although it's obviously not professional quality. To stay on topic: Do we have a resource that lists the original Japanese names (and English translations) of the pieces? This page doesn't.
Or perhaps have it replace a Knight on the board, and play from there as Pocket Knight.
Or, of course, we could have it replace the Queen. This actually sounds the most interesting to me.
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