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Sam Trenholme wrote on Tue, Jun 6, 2006 09:13 AM UTC:
One interesting Chess variant which tries to solve White's first-move advantage is Pie Rule Chess, which works as follows:
  • White makes a move.
  • Black then decides whether he wants to play with the white or black pieces.
  • The came then continues as normal (with the possibility of the players swapping seats).
Now, in terms of what side to play based on the 20 possible opening moves of FIDE chess, here is the choices I would make:

First moveSide to play
a3Black
a4Black
Na3Black
b3???
b4???
c3Black
c4White
Nc3White
d3???
d4White
e3???
e4White
f3Black
f4???
Nf3White
g3???
g4???
h3Black
h4Black
Ng3Black

Any other opinions on using the pie rule in FIDE Chess?

Edit: I note that the Pie Rule does nothing to discourage Black from playing to draw. My answer to the draw problem is to make it so both players get 0 points (instead of half a point) in a drawn game; both players lose. Or have it so that the player with more material on the board wins .75 points after a three-fold repetition/50 moves without capture/insufficient mating material position. We can also consider the Ko rule for chess: You can not repeat a position on the board that has been already played.