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Chess 66. Board based on the 8x8 arrangement - with the difference that 66 fields are now available. (8x8, Cells: 66) [All Comments] [Add Comment or Rating]
🕸Fergus Duniho wrote on Sat, Apr 16, 2022 06:42 PM UTC in reply to Gerd Degens from 07:38 AM:

"Could a Bishop move from d1 to e8 along the path d1-c2-b3-a4/4-b5-c6-d7-e8?" (a4/4 is a typo, h5/5 is correct)

No, a4/4 is not a typo. It is sandwiched between b3 and b5, and h5/5 is on the other side of the board from these spaces.

Yes, that is possible, but only in two moves.

Okay, but here's what you wrote previously:

"In this diagram, it looks like the Bishop can move from b5 to b3 or from g4 to g6. Is that a correct interpretation?" Yes, that is the correct interpretation.

To be clear, my questions were about what a Bishop could do on a single move. If the longer move I described cannot be done as a single move, then I would presume that B b5-b3 is illegal for similar reasons. Or is there some asymmetry that allows one and forbids the other? I should ask, could either "B b4-b3" or "B b3-b5" ever count as a legal move?