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Things are too quite here, so I'm going to ramble on a bit.
<p>
Orthochess has a piece density of 50% -- 16 pieces on each side, and
64 squares on which to put them. Most variants on 8x8 keep that piece
density, but almost all variants on 10x10 boards have a lower density.
For example, recently Modern Kamil and a set of Chess with Ultima,
Rococo and Supremo Pieces variants have been published on these pages,
all with a density of 40%. This effects play a fair bit.
<p>
It's not just these recent variants, either of course. Grand Chess has a
density of 40%, while Omega Chess has a density of 42%. Of course, those
variants that keep a board of 8 rows, no matter how long, such as Gothic
Chess or King's Court or (David Short's) Double Chess can keep a density
of 50%. But very wide boards increase the power of orthogonal pieces at
the expense of other pieces. This is not necessarily a bad thing, but it
has a definite effect on the play of the game.
<p>
One reason for the lower piece density is a certain reluctance to go to
three row arrays. Mind you, Al-Ces has a full three-line array with a
piece density of 60%, but it's a game that takes a very long time to play.
That might be a lot of the reason. I have an unpublished Chess variant
on a 10x10 board that I playtested with Tony Quantilla where each side had
25 pieces (10 Pawns, 3 'Super-Pawns' and 12 pieces per side), and it seemed
like we had a ton of material each. While Tony got the upper hand on me
early on, it seemed like it took forever for him to finish me off. Perhaps
20-22 pieces is right number to have on a 10x10 board if you want fairly
Orthchess-like play.
<p>
The moral of this rambling? Maybe you can't compare densities between
different size boards. Perhaps there is some better measurement out there
(although if you are trying for a game whose play is not much like
Orthochess, then you shouldn't care, anyway).