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I would give it a higher rating, but it only goes up to excellent. Just one thing, though... 'You may capture a piece on a square of the other color than the capturing piece is bound to,' this phrase baffles me, especially because there are no colorbound pieces.
Man. Every time I think I've figured out which game is the best, someone else comes up with another winner. I don't know how the judges are going to decide this one... :-)
Well, since none of these pieces ever change the color of squares that they sit on, <strong>all</strong> pieces in this game are colorbound. Just not in the normal sense . . .
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The judge or judges won't have deal with this game, since it's a noncompeting entry. (I won a bunch of prizes in 2000-2001 and am taking a break from competing in design contests for a while.)
excellent game, one of the illustration has the wrong coloring for the squares. The second set in the middle of the page, board2 should have the opposing coloring
Thanks for pointing that out -- I've fixed the illustration.
Question: If I have understood correctly, the cardinal can check a king from the other board. What stops 1; 2e1-1d3, black any, 2: 1d3-2e5+ or even mate if the king is immobile, as the cardinal can't be captured by a pawn?
Ian, moves that change board have to be to an empty square on that board (to quote):
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However the following constraints hold on moves that change board to avoid changing color:
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All moves must be legal on the board they are made on; and
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The square on the other board that they fall through to must be empty.
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Thus, no check, since the Cardinal can't move to that square, and so does not attack it.
Peter, thanks for the explanation - I just didn't read the rules carefully enough! Another way of saying it is that all captures are made on the same board as the piece starts on and can only be made, in the case of an off-color capture, if the corresponding square on the other board is empty. The possibilty of having pieces occupying the equivalent square on both boards is intriguing. E.g. the White king could be on 2f1, the black king on 1f1 and then the white king would be mated by a black cardinal on 2b5 as it couldn't move to the other board because of the presence of the black king - or does the rule about kings not being able to be next to each other no longer apply due to the fact they couldn't capture each other as they're on different color squares? Anyway, assuming it still holds, a black cardinal on 2e3 wouldn't check as it could never move to that square. Great game- sorry about these questions but I'm really trying to get this as it has such promise.
What makes it unique, the double board, the pieces being color-bound on each board, the board switching, take a little getting used to. However, the rules are very clear and once the logic starts to become more intuitive, the game is very playable. The piece strength compared to the board size appears well suited to the game. Very nice game.
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