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Man. Moves to any adjacent square, like a King, but not royal.[All Comments] [Add Comment or Rating]
Charles Gilman wrote on Sat, Apr 12, 2003 07:22 AM UTC:
I understood that the name of this piece in Courier Chess was spelled Mann, and the German speling was usually preserved in English to distinguish from 'man' meaning a piece of any kind. Either way it is confusing. My own preference is for calilng it Prince, in keeping with royal names for other orthogonal-diagonal combined pieces. Commoner has the problem that constitutionally the term covers Pawns and Knights!

John Ayer wrote on Sat, Jun 7, 2003 02:35 AM UTC:
I think that 'henchman' would be a more idiomatic translation from the German than 'commoner' or 'man' but it seems a bit late in the day to suggest that.

Jeff Rients wrote on Fri, Apr 23, 2004 07:05 PM UTC:
I like both Prince and Henchman. Both are much for colorful than Man or Commoner. I think Henchman would be particularly appropriate in games that use many such pieces.

Charles Gilman wrote on Sat, Sep 3, 2011 05:54 AM UTC:
Does anyone know of a problem featuring more than one of this piece? If so, is its problematist name pluralised as if a standard English name (Manns) or is it naturalised plural and all (Männer)? I am aware that 'men' means pieces in general, as in 'The man on a5 is a Nightrider and the men on d2 and e6 are Fiveleapers'.

Jörg Knappen wrote on Mon, Sep 5, 2011 06:21 AM UTC:
I have never seen the plural of the man/Mann piece of the Courier game, but I'd consider the plural 'Mannen' (which has an archaic tone and restricts the meaning from male person to soldier or guardian). Mannen may even work as an irregular pliral in english (like oxen or VAXen)

John Ayer wrote on Tue, Sep 6, 2011 12:00 AM UTC:
I agree with Joerg for games in which 'Mann' is used.

V. Reinhart wrote on Sun, Jan 29, 2017 05:51 AM UTC:

The Mann is also used in Waterloo Chess and Amsterdam Medieval Chess (called spy) and "Chess on an Infinite Plane" and "Bulldog Chess" (called guard). I'm in a few games using a guard but no one is sure what it's worth. Fair exchange for a bishop or knight, or is it worth more than that?
 


V. Reinhart wrote on Sun, Jan 29, 2017 03:54 PM UTC:

But the icon we're using for the Mann (Guard) doesn't look anything like the images shown on this page. Is there any way I can submit an image to this forum, and someone can add it to this page? Or another idea is to make a new page dedicated just to the Guard. It's a very popular piece in chess variant games.


Kevin Pacey wrote on Sun, Jan 29, 2017 06:11 PM UTC:

On an 8x8 board, according to chess theroticians a chess king has a fighting value of 4 pawns (though noting it cannot be exchanged). Since a mann moves exactly like a king, even though (or especially as) it is a non-royal piece, I see no reason not to put a mann at 4 pawns in value as well.


H. G. Muller wrote on Sun, Jan 29, 2017 09:49 PM UTC:

The problem is that Knights beat Men more often than not, and that a pair of Men is totally crushed by the Bishop pair (in the presence of sufficiently many Pawns). So it appears the value 4 is total hogwash.


V. Reinhart wrote on Sun, Jan 29, 2017 10:02 PM UTC:
I agree the guard (mann) is probably worth less than 4, but how much less?
 
According to a table in Wikipedia "Chess Piece Relative Value" Emanuel Lasker (World Chess Champion for 27 years) and Larry Evans (chess Grandmaster) estimated the king is worth 4 points. If we say the guard is worth less, are we saying these guys are wrong?

Kevin Pacey wrote on Mon, Jan 30, 2017 01:11 AM UTC:

It may depend on how one values minor pieces, and perhaps more importantly if a single mann can handle a lone minor piece, with or without an extra pawn (with other pieces and pawns on the board, to some extent). A minor piece has been valued as much as worth 3.5 pawns (which I tend to agree with), or as little as 3 pawns. Also, two bishops are commonly thought worth a bit more than two knights on average, even if one assumes a single bishop = knight exactly on average. Perhaps Lasker and Evans (and other chess authorities) had more in mind the situation of a king vs. enemy piece [+ extra pawn] just on one side of the board, and didn't think about pitting two king type pieces against two minors.

Piece combinations pitted against each other might lead to different conclusions about the numerical value of a piece than one piece (or more) vs. one piece [+ extra pawn] battles (e.g. 7 knights beat 3 queens [probably no pawns involved, though] I seem to recall being posted, yet numerically in value the 3 queens would normally on paper be evaluated to be very much superior). Having said that, H.G.'s examples are for two pieces vs. two men battles (with a supporting cast of pawns for both sides), which seems close to a one on one battle, so I'm not at all confident any more that a king or mann is (ever, or at least on average) worth 4 pawns (on an 8x8 board).

[edit: Being foggy from daily medication aside, it should have been obvious to me that a mann quite possibly has a {significantly?} higher value than a king's fighting value, whatever that ought to be. That's since a mann doesn't have to stay out of check like a king, and a mann can be traded for something if necessary.]

P.S.: Note that in chess king and pawn endgames, a king can at times restrain or even eventually overcome (through zugzwang) up to just 3 connected passed pawns, but in other cases might gobble up many pawns that are not defended by the opposing king, which Lasker & Evans et al may have weighed too. Pieces (or combinations of them) can be somewhat different in value in an endgame as opposed to in the middlegame or opening phase (e.g. Rook + Pawn may be >= Bishop + Knight often in an endgame, but not usually sooner). IMHO its hard to feel completely sure of an exact average value for a piece, since for one thing the endgame phase, if any, comes last. An exact position can also naturally affect values: queen vs. pieces (with or without extra pawns) positions can often be sensitive to something as seemingly slight as whether most/all of the pawns and pieces of the side without the queen are comfortably protecting each other as they attempt to continue to operate.


Kevin Pacey wrote on Mon, Jan 30, 2017 04:33 AM UTC:

I've edited my last comment somewhat substantially.


Kevin Pacey wrote on Mon, Jan 30, 2017 07:42 AM UTC:

I've added a possibly vital edit (as indicated) to my 2nd last post.


V. Reinhart wrote on Mon, Jan 30, 2017 04:28 PM UTC:
Thanks for the information. The good news is that a guard (man) doesn't have the same value as any other classical chess piece. It fills a "hole" between knight and bishop, and the rook. So it's usually easy to decide if you should exchange it or not. Capturing a rook is worth the loss of a guard. If in melee with a knight or bishop, get support or flee.
 
Btw, I think that this discussion about the value of the guard provides an irrefutable basis for the inconsistency in naming this piece "Man". In an actual medieval war (not chess), a man is not superior to a knight or bishop. A man is the same thing as a peasant (pawn) and may or may not be well-fed and capable of fighting.
 
A guard is always fit and has martial arts training, and can be armed with weapons such as a dagger or spear, so has good chance when fighting with a knight. (In Waterloo chess the icon for the guard carries a very large stone for throwing, although in this game the guard is even stronger than a king - its inventor has also called him an "Elite" or "Elite Guard").
 
There is also a basis for judging a guard as superior to a bishop. A guard does not have theological training, but the sobering truth is this: the bishop's membership in the clergy will not protect him from an armed fighter trained in the martial arts.
 
Even 14 years ago there were comments that the name "man" might have problems.  (See comments below from 2003).
 
In my opinion this page should be re-titled "Guard", with a comment saying also known as "man".

George Duke wrote on Mon, Jan 30, 2017 04:36 PM UTC:

Waterloo -- better than all-empty-space Grand Chess anyway.

Then this one mentioned as also using Commoner/Man is even better and meeting CVPage standards: Medieval_(europe).

The world expert at values, H.G. Muller joined this discussion, and I still hold out for value of nearer 6.0 for Falcon than Rook 5.0. I just played three Falcon games on Game Courier and early Falcon uses and forks were decisive in all of them whilst the Rooks mostly sat in place. It's matter of teaching programs maybe to open with Falcon; then the gap is filled in value between Rook and Queen, the way Man/Commoner/Guard can fill in between Bishop and Rook lower scale for beginners. (But Muller is right that anything towards 7.0 for Falcon among the four fundamental chess pieces was irresponsibly unsupported.)

Vickalan's point is good one, that better CVs have clear value in exchange. That was recurrent theme for years in our thread on Game Design: Value_In_Exchange. When most though not all pieces have different distinguishable values, there is intriguing Flight and Fight.

Anyway Man is just a Queen, and that's how to get its value. If full Queen is 9.0, then develop method for Queen limited to 6 steps not 7. Then get limited Queen up to 5 spaces, then Q4, Q3, Q2, Man. Since Q6 is near Q7 but others progressively detrimental, it might go: Q6 8.6, Q5 8.0, Q4 7.2, Q3 6.2, Q2 5.0, Man 3.6. No values in isolation since it depends on other pieces as well as array and rules.

Principle of value in exchange is why I dislike all yes all 50 Carrera variants, that three pieces are boringly near-same-valued.


Kevin Pacey wrote on Mon, Jan 30, 2017 06:03 PM UTC:

I tend to agree with Dutch world chess champion Euwe, who put a queen at worth 10 pawns (Q=R+B+P, or Q = 5.5 + 3.5 + 1 = 10). In that case, oddly enough, if George's value for a mann (3.6, if a queen =9) is correct, if a queen is supposed to be 10 then by ratio a mann would be put at 4 pawns. However, I'd have to check whether Lasker or Evans put a queen at 10 pawns to guess if they saw things this way.

George's is the sort of estimating method I've used for other pieces on occasion. One problem might be that it doesn't take into account that the mann is not a long-range piece (a reason why a colour-bound bishop is a match for a non-colour-bound knight; the latter also has a leaping ability to compensate for moving to less squares on average than a bishop). The disadvantage of being only short-range would show up even more on a larger board than 8x8.


V. Reinhart wrote on Mon, Jan 30, 2017 08:27 PM UTC:
Wikipedia shows the data (table in "Chess Piece Relative Value") for Lasker's and Evan's piece values as this(NBRQK):
Lasker 3  3   5 "9-10" 4
Evans  3½ 3½+ 5  10    4
 
Thanks George for showing the links to Waterloo and Amsterdam Medieval Chess. The later can also be played here:
http://hgm.nubati.net/variants/amsterdam
I've been looking for someone to play against in Amsterdam Medieval Chess. I'll be happy to play at either site. If anyone would like to play leave a message.:)

H. G. Muller wrote on Mon, Jan 30, 2017 10:57 PM UTC:

Larry Kaufman has shown by statistical analysis of a huge number of GM games that the game outcomes are optimally predicted by the following values: (P-N-B-R-Q):

100 - 325 - 325 - 500 - 975

with the caveat that a pair of Bishops is worth 700 (rather than 2 x 325 = 650). Of course the value of a Pawn is not defined very well; we know there are many kinds of Pawns, with very different values, from backaward / doubled / edge Pawns to centralized protected passers. The opening value of the Commoner in my tests would be about 310 on this scale.

And yes, those claiming it would be 4 are very much off.

It is true that piece values in themselves are already a highly simplified approximation to reality, and that the power of an army cannot be written as a plain sum over its individual pieces. The Bishop pair already shows that. The 3Q vs 7N (which was in the presence of Pawns, BTW) is another example of that.


V. Reinhart wrote on Tue, Jan 31, 2017 04:45 AM UTC:
There's an interesting contradiction here. We trust Kaufman's data because it is based on games played by grandmasters. Grandmaster play is important because we are measuring the value of pieces when played with accuracy (not affected by poor play and blunders). Grandmasters say the king is worth 4. We say the king is worth only 3.1.
Conclusion: Grandmasters can win even more games if they knew a king's value is 3.1, not 4.0
 
On a side note, I wrote an article specifically about the guard (commoner/man) which interested readers can find here:
https://www.chess.com/forum/view/chess960-chess-variants/a-critical-analysis-of-the-guard-in-chess
The opening paragraph includes a total of 26 other names for this piece. I don't talk much about the value of the guard, but it does have a brief quote by the one "HGMuller". :)

Greg Strong wrote on Tue, Jan 31, 2017 05:01 AM UTC:

Conclusion: Grandmasters can win even more games if they knew a king's value is 3.1, not 4.0

I don't think this is true.  The King can't be traded - each player has exactly one at all times, so any consideration of it's value is purely theoretical (at least in orthodox chess.)


Kevin Pacey wrote on Tue, Jan 31, 2017 05:37 AM UTC:

There's a book called King Power that I haven't read in a long time. Sometimes a king assists in attacking the other king, even in the middlegame once in a while, and a king is often able to defend itself (or defend squares/pieces/pawns around it) from attack. The king regularly comes into its own in the endgame phase. In Grandmaster Secrets: Endings, American GM Andy Soltis mentions the concept of creating a mismatch in one area of the board, where a superior force overpowers a weaker one locally. Often a king is part of such a superior force. To a strong player, it's often not too hard to tell whether a king is going to help to make progress of this sort, and he really doesn't need to tally up the theoretical value of the attacking force (with a king among it) vs. the defending force to know which side will win out in a local battle, or in other words, in a mismatch massacre in the making.


V. Reinhart wrote on Sat, Feb 4, 2017 06:40 PM UTC:

Thanks Kevin for the information.

I recently started using Fairy-Max, and did a test to try to confirm HGMuller's information. Using guards on a 10 x 8 board, each test starts with at least 2 knights and 2 bishops for each side, and guards on only one side.

 

asymmetry: [2 guards vs. 2 bishops]
guards win (score) = 40/80 = 50.0%

 

asymmetry: [2 guards vs. 2 knights]
guards win (score) = 46/80 = 57.5%

 

asymmetry: [2 guards vs. 1 bishop and 1 knight]
guards win (score) = 101/200 = 50.5%

 

I think these tests confirm HGM's conclusions. A guard seems to be very nearly equal to a bishop, and slightly superior to a knight. When the game is [3 knights, 3 bishops] vs. [2 knights, 2 bishops, 2 guards] the guards are almost exactly equal to the average of knights and bishops.

 

note: this test started with an unknown value for the guard. By fine-tuning their value, they might be able to play slightly better, so the guards value might be even a little more than summarized here.

 

Btw, here's an updated image of a guard (what I see more often in variant chess games).

 


Kevin Pacey wrote on Sat, Feb 4, 2017 09:35 PM UTC:

Just a guess, but the value of having even just a single guard in the endgame could be lower than I imagined on even a relatively small 8x8 board. This is because there could be less chances of creating a mismatch somewhere, if both sides have a king plus guard, and material is pretty equal in other ways too. That's since a potential attacking king can be opposed by a king (or sometimes even a guard?) in one area (or side) of the board, while elsewhere a potential attacking guard can be opposed by a guard (or sometimes even a king?) as well. Then it would seem harder to sufficiently distract a defensive side's king or guard in either area (or side) of the board for an offensive king/guard to break through somewhere, via a mismatch. The guards might thus be considered to have at least some good defensive value, but I suppose if attempting to measure the value of a lone guard vs. a lone minor piece (with a supporting cast of equal armies for both sides), a high number of draws tends to devalue it, if it scores just a few more wins than would be par (for instance).


Kevin Pacey wrote on Sat, Feb 11, 2017 06:37 AM UTC:

Somehow I cannot shake the feeling that on an 8x8 board, in many endgames at least, a single [modern] elephant (alfil+ferz compound piece) would not be worth quite as much as a single general (aka mann), with numerous pawns on the board. Such an elephant leaps, but is colour-bound while lacking a bishop's mobility. At the least, there could be many games featuring a 'bad elephant', sort of like there are cases of 'bad bishops' in chess - that is, just in regard to having many of the elephant's pawns fixed on the same colour as it moves on. Has anyone tried to evaluate the value of an elephant, at least in the opening phase? I estimate it at being worth just a fraction less than a knight is worth. Modern Shatranj is an 8x8 variant that includes elephants and generals, but no queen-like pieces, making it somewhat endgame-like from the start of a game (noting also that the board is not checkered like for a game of chess, done for that game so as to aid calculation, according to world chess champion Lasker's Manual of Chess).


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