💡📝Joshua Morris wrote on Sun, Aug 7, 2005 09:02 AM UTC:
We've been playing without drops; as Larry Smith implied, the Sho's
ability to create pawns makes draws uncommon. A Sho on it's seventh rank
is a dangerous beast. 'Drop Kozune' could be a fine variant, however.
We've been using plain old rooks, bishops, and knights for pieces. It's
easy enough to remember, 'This piece looks like a rook, so it moves like a
rook, but only two spaces. And it leaps.' Well, perhaps not so easy. It
does challenge our Chess-based pattern recognition.
You could use graphics from the Alfarie collection on Game Courier. I
know there is a Wazir-Dabbaba graphic (the 'Woody Rook' from The
Remarkable Rookies), and there's probably a Ferz-Alfil. An ordinary
knight should suffice for the Ne, since they are identical.
For symbolic representation, I like a modified Parham notation:
ko: +
zu: x
ne: o
A kozu would be a + and x combined, a zune an x in a circle, etc.
Sadly, I can't use Zillions; I don't run Windows. Even so, I would be
thrilled to see a ZRF.