Comments/Ratings for a Single Item
Infinite Chess is actually played on a finite 'figure-eight'board.
Keith Douglas posted Chess with an Infinite Board in 1997.
The first diagram here shows an infinite board with a corner on a1. I believe that White can force mate when he has King (d4) and Rook (h8) against a lone Black King (f6). White needs to get his two pieces together, somewhere like Rook (p16) and King (p14). Then the slow process of pushing the Black King down to (a1) can begin.
I believe his idea is more workable than both variants.
http://www.bcvs.ukf.net/reshap.htm#openp
See Infinite Chess page for an article about variants proposed by Tim Converse and Jianying Ji.
See Ralph Betza's Chess on a Really Big Board for his thoughts on boards ranging from 16x16 to 512x512. Huge (but still finite) boards do not require the complex rules that an infinite board will.
Extending the number of ranks and files to infinity does not also increase the axes of movement through individual spaces. This is a large 2D game, but it is not 3D or 4D. So, I have removed it from those categories.
The title of this page seems wrong on both counts: it is not infinite, and it is 4d, not 3d.
The introduction discusses infinite chess, but the eventual game description is clearly 4d (in an asymmetric, "2d+2d" way like Parton's Sphinx Chess).
The diagram on the page superficially resembles that of Sphinx Chess, but it has only two axes of movement, the vertical and the horizontal. If you follow the lines of movement of pieces on this board, you will see that multiple boards have been placed together to create a larger playing area on which pieces are still moving in two dimensions.
No, rules 2-3 means that pieces cannot move from one "domain" to another except as in a 4d (asymmetric) game.
But it does look like I may have been wrong about the title: the domains are each infinite, while apparently the domains are supposed to be limited to an 8x8 grid.
8 comments displayed
Permalink to the exact comments currently displayed.