変則チェス2

<List of chess variants>

 2 Chess-derived games
  チェスから派生したゲーム
   2.1 Orthodox chess rules
    正統のルール
     2.1.1 Orthodox rules on a standard 8×8 board
      標準の8x8盤を用いた正統のルール
       2.1.1.1 Different starting position
        異なった開始位置
       2.1.1.2 Different number of pieces
        異なった駒数
     2.1.2 Orthodox rules on an unorthodox board
      正統でない盤を用いた正統のルール
   2.2 Unorthodox rules with traditional pieces
    伝統的な駒を用いた非正統のルール
     2.2.1 Unorthodox rules on a standard 8×8 board
      標準の8x8盤を用いた非正統のルール
       2.2.1.1 Multimove variants
        複数回移動のバリアント
       2.2.1.2 Incomplete information or elements of chance
        不完全情報または運要素
     2.2.2 Unorthodox rules on an unorthodox board
      正統でない盤を用いた非正統のルール
   2.3 Unorthodox rules using nontraditional pieces
    伝統的でない駒を用いた非正統のルール
     2.3.1 Nontraditional (fairy) pieces on a standard 8×8 board
      標準の8x8盤を用いた伝統的でない駒(フェアリー駒)
       2.3.1.1 Empress and/or princess pieces
        女帝駒/王女駒
       2.3.1.2 Other unorthodox pieces
        その他の正統でない駒
     2.3.2 Unorthodox pieces using unorthodox boards
      正統でない盤を使用した正統でない駒
   2.4 Single-player variants
    1人用のバリアント
   2.5 Variants for more than two people
    3人以上用のバリアント
   2.6 Games inspired by chess
    チェスからインスピレーションを受けたゲーム

 3 Chess-related historical and regional games
  チェス関連の歴史的・地域的ゲーム
   3.1 Historical
    歴史的ゲーム
   3.2 Regional
    地域的ゲーム

<Chess-derived games>

 This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness.
 You can help by expanding it with reliably sourced entries.
 These chess variants are derived from chess by changing the board, board setup, pieces, or rules.

<2.1 Orthodox chess rules>

 Many variants employ standard chess rules and mechanics, but vary the starting position of the pieces or number of pieces.

<2.1.1 Orthodox rules on a standard 8×8 board>

<2.1.1.1 Different starting position>

 These variants use standard boards and pieces, but the pieces start on nontraditional squares.
 In most such variants, the pawns are placed on their usual squares, but the position of other pieces is either randomly determined or selected by the players.
 The motivation for these variants is usually to nullify established opening knowledge.
 The downside of these variants is that the initial position usually has less harmony and balance than the standard chess position.

  • Chess960 (or Fischer Random Chess) <by Bobby Fischer (1996)
 The placement of the pieces on the first rank is randomised, with the opponent's pieces mirroring it.

  • Displacement chess
 Some pieces in the initial position are exchanged but the rules remain exactly the same.
 Some examples of this may be that the king and queen are flipped, or the knight on the b-file is traded with the bishop on the f-file.

  • Pre-chess
 Proposed by Pal Benko in 1978. The game starts with white and black pawns set as usual, but the initial position of other pieces is selected by the players.
 White first places one of his pieces on his first rank, and then Black does the same.
 Players continue to alternate in this manner until all pieces have been placed, with the only restriction being that bishops must be on opposite-colour squares.
 The game then proceeds in the usual way.

  • Transcendental chess
 Similar to Chess960, but the opening white and black positions do not mirror each other.

  • Upside-down chess
 The white and black pieces are switched so that White's pieces are on the 8th rank, with pawns on the 7th rank, one step away from promotion.
 The starting position looks like a standard chess starting position, but from the other player's perspective.
 As the pawns are blocked by pieces in the starting position, the game always starts with a knight move and smother checkmates are common.

<2.1.1.2 Different number of pieces>

 These variants use standard chess pieces on a standard board, but players begin with unorthodox numbers of pieces.
 For example, starting with multiple queens or fewer pawns.
 Many such games use unbalanced starting positions, with one player having more or less of a particular piece than the other player.

  • Charge of the Light Brigade
 Apart from the usual king and pawns, one side has three queens and the other has seven knights.

  • Dunsany's chess (and the similar Horde chess)
 One side has standard chess pieces, and the other side has 32 pawns (or 36 in the case of Horde chess).

  • Endgame chess (or The Pawns Game)
 Players start the game with only pawns and a king. Normal check, checkmate, en passant, and pawn promotion rules apply.

  • Handicap chess (or Chess with odds)
 Variations to equalise chances of players with different strength.

  • Peasants' Revolt <By R. L. Frey (1947)
 White has a king and eight pawns (the peasants) against Black's king, pawn, and four knights (the nobles).
 Black has the advantage.
 To narrow the contest, the game has also been played with three knights (on b8, c8, and g8) instead of four.

  • Sixteen Pawns
 White plays without his queen, but chooses where on the third and fourth ranks to place eight extra pawns.
 By Legall de Kermeur (18th century).
 Alexandre Deschapelles and Louis-Charles Mahé de La Bourdonnais later established that eight extra pawns favour White too much, and hence played the game with only five, six, or seven extra pawns for White instead.

  • Really Bad Chess
 A mobile video game by Zach Gage; Each player has one king and fifteen other pieces selected at random.

  • Weak!
 White has the usual pieces, Black has one king, seven knights, and sixteen pawns.
 This game was played at a Columbia University chess club in the 1960s.

<2.1.2 Orthodox rules on an unorthodox board>

 In these variants, the same pieces and rules as in chess are used, but the board is different;
 It can be smaller or larger, the shape of either the board or individual spaces can be non-square or modular,[14] or it can even be extra-dimensional or unbounded.
 The movement of pieces in some variants is modified in concurrence with the geometry of the gameboard.

  • Active Chess
 Played on a 9×8 board, adding a queen with an extra pawn in front.
 Invented by G. Kuzmichov (1989), whose students tested the game, deciding that the optimal starting position was to place the second queen on the eighth or ninth files.

  • Balbo's Game <By G. Balbo (1974)
 A novel-shaped board with 70 squares. Full armies for each player, minus one pawn.
 No castling.

  • Brusky's Hexagonal Chess <By Yakov Brusky (1966)
 Chess on an irregular board of 84 hex cells.
 Same as Gliński's Hexagonal Chess, but with ten pawns instead of nine, linear startup, two forward move directions for pawns, pawns capture forward diagonally, and castling.

  • Circular chess
 Played on a circular board consisting of four rings, each of sixteen squares.

  • Cross chess <By George Dekle Sr.
 Cross-shaped cells, board geometry like hex chess but moves akin to normal chess (e.g. bishops have four directions (not six); queens eight (not twelve)).
 Extra rook, knight, and pawn per side.

  • Cylinder chess
 Played on a cylinder board with a- and h-files "connected".
 Thus a player can use them as if the a-file were next to the h-file (and vice versa).

  • De Vasa's Hexagonal Chess <By Helge E. de Vasa (1953)
 Chess on a rhombus-shaped board of 81 hex cells.
 Same as Gliński's Hexagonal Chess, but linear startup, two forward move directions for pawns, pawns capture forward diagonally to the side, and castling.

  • Double Chess <By Julian Hayward (1916)
 Two full armies per side on a 12×16 board, the first to mate an enemy king wins.
 Pawns advance up to four steps on their first move.
 Capablanca found the game "remarkably interesting".

  • Doublewide chess
 Two regular chessboards are connected (for a 16×8 play surface).
 Each player plays with two complete sets of chess pieces.

  • Flying chess
 Played on a board of 8×8×2, giving a total of 128 cells.
 Only certain pieces can move to and from the additional level.

  • Gliński's Hexagonal Chess <By Władysław Gliński (1936)
 The most popular version of chess for the hex board. Includes three bishops, nine pawns, 91 hex cells.

  • Grid chess
 The board is overlaid with a grid of lines. For a move to be legal, it must across at least one of these lines.

  • Hexagonal chess
 A family of variants played on a hexgrid with three colours and three bishops.

  • Infinite chess
 Numerous players and mathematicians have conceived of chess variations played on an unbounded chessboard.[15]
 In one example, when using "Converse's rules," the pieces and their relative starting positions are unchanged - only the board is infinitely large.[16]

  • Los Alamos chess (or Anti-Clerical chess)
 Played on a 6×6 board without bishops. This was the first chess-like game played by a computer program.

  • Masonic Chess <By George Dekle Sr.
 Every other board rank is indented.
 Same as chess, with moves adapted to the new brickwork-like board.

  • McCooey's Hexagonal Chess <By Richard Honeycutt and David McCooey (1978-1979)
 Chess on the same hexagonal board as Gliński's Hexagonal Chess, but using a different starting array, seven pawns instead of nine, and pawns capture forward diagonally.

  • Millennium 3D chess <By William D'Agostino (2001)
 An easy-to-learn 3D variant played on an 8×8×3 board.

  • Minichess
 A family of variants played with regular chess pieces and standard rules, but on a smaller board.

  • Polgar reform chess
 In his book Reform-Chess (1997), László Polgár proposed several variants played on board of size 5×8, 6×8, 8×6, or 9×6.
 The initial piece setup is determined by players in the same way as in Benko's Pre-chess.
 There are special rules for castling depending on the board.
 Polgar recommended these variants to train creativity and to speed up the game.

  • Polgar Superstar Chess
 Hexagonal variant played on a special star-shaped board. Invented by László Polgár (2002).

  • Rhombic chess <By Tony Paletta (1980)
 Uses a hex-shaped board comprising 72 rhombus cells.
 Normal set of chess pieces move edgewise or pointwise. Checkmate objective as usual.

  • Shafran's Hexagonal Chess <By Grigorevich Shafran (1939)
 Chess on an irregular hex board of 70 cells.
 Same as Gliński's Hexagonal Chess, but differs by starting position, pawn first-move options, pawns capturing forward diagonally, and castling.

  • Spherical chess
 A family of variants played on a chessboard wrapped around a sphere.
 The a- and h-files are adjacent. The poles are circular or octagonal and may or may not be occupied according to the variant.
 There are no board edges, so kings always have eight adjacent squares.
 Trans-polar diagonal moves mostly differentiate between variants.[23][24]

  • Three-dimensional chess (or 3D chess)
 A family of variants using two or more boards at different levels.

  • Tri-D Chess (or Star Trek Chess)
 The 3D version of chess depicted in the television series Star Trek.
 Rulesets created by fans.

<2.2 Unorthodox rules with traditional pieces>

 These variants introduce changes in the mechanics of the game, such as movement of pieces, rules for capturing, or winning conditions, using standard chess pieces.

<2.2.1 Unorthodox rules on a standard 8×8 board>

  • Andernach chess
 A piece making a capture changes colour.

  • Atomic chess
 Capture on any square results in an "atomic explosion" which kills (i.e. removes from the game) all pieces in the eight surrounding squares, except for pawns.

  • Beirut Chess <By Jim Winslow (1992)
 Players secretly equip one of their men with a "bomb", which can be detonated at any time, wiping out all pieces on surrounding squares.
 Win by checkmating the opponent, or blowing up his king.

  • Benedict chess
 Pieces are not allowed to be "captured". Example: if a white bishop 'captures' a black knight, that knight is then removed and replaced with a white knight on the same square. The 'attacking' bishop does not move.

  • Checkers chess
 Normal rules of chess. However, pieces can only move forwards until they have reached the far rank.

  • Checkless chess
 Players are forbidden from giving check except to checkmate.

  • Circe chess
 Captured pieces are reborn on their starting squares.

  • Crazyhouse
 Captured pieces change the colour and can be dropped on any unoccupied location.
 There are two variations of this variant, known as Loop chess and Chessgi.

  • Cubic Chess <By Vladimír Pribylinec (1977)
 Piece cubes display the six piece types, a player can promote any pawn by rotating its cube to match a captured piece type.

  • Dynamo Chess <By Hans Klüver and Peter Kahl (1968)
 Capturing is replaced by pushing or pulling enemy pieces off the board.
 A close variant of Push Chess (by Fred Galvin, 1967).

  • Einstein chess
 Pieces transform into more or less powerful pieces when they move.

  • Extinction chess
 To win, a player must capture all of any one type of pieces of the opponent (for example, all the knights an opponent has, or all their pawns, etc.).

  • Guard chess (or Icelandic chess)
 Allows captures only when a piece is completely unprotected by friendly pieces.
 Checkmate occurs when the piece forcing the mate is protected and therefore cannot be captured.

  • Haft Schrödinger Chess (and Schrödinger's Chess)
 Every piece starts in a quantum superposition initially able to be any piece until the waveform is collapsed by observation.
 As in chess, Haft Schrödinger Chess does not have hidden information, whereas Schrödinger's Chess is regarded as a game of hidden information.

  • Hierarchical chess
 Pieces must be moved in the order: pawn, knight, bishop, rook, queen, king.
 A player who has the corresponding piece but cannot move it loses.

  • Hostage chess
 Captured pieces are held in the capturer's "prison", and can be released by the opponent and dropped into play (like shogi) via a "hostage exchange". By John Leslie (1997).

  • Jedi Knight chess
 Knights may move three steps diagonally or horizontally or both, depending on the rules accepted.

  • Kamikaze chess (or Hara-Kiri chess) <From B. G. Laws (1928)
 When capturing, the capturing piece is removed from play also.
 So, a king cannot defend itself by capturing an attacker.
 A capture is not allowed if it exposes the king to discovered check.

  • Kamikaze chess
 A variant of Losing chess.
 The king is royal and removing a check takes precedence over capturing.
 The king must be lost last; moving into check is permitted after all other men have been captured.

  • King of the Hill
 In addition to checkmate, a legal move that moves one's own king to one of the center squares (d4, d5, e4, e5) wins.
 This is analogous to sannin shogi's rule that allows a player to win by legally moving their king to the center.

  • Knight Relay chess
 Pieces defended by a friendly knight can move as a knight.

  • Knightmate (or Mate The Knight) <By Bruce Zimov (1972)
 The goal is to checkmate the opponent's knight (initially on e-file).
 The kings on b- and g-files can be captured as other pieces.
 Pawns can promote to kings but not to knights.

  • Legan chess
 Played as if the board would be rotated 45°, initial position and pawn movements are adjusted accordingly.

  • Losing chess (or Antichess, Giveaway chess, Suicide chess, Killer chess, Take-all chess, ・Reverse chess)
 Capturing moves are mandatory and the object is to lose all one's pieces.
 There is no check; the king is captured like an ordinary piece.

  • Madrasi chess (or Weird chess)
 A piece which is attacked by the same type of piece of the opposite colour is paralysed.
 Monochromatic chess: All pieces must stay on the same colour square as they initially begin.

  • Patrol chess
 Captures and checks are only possible if the capturing or checking piece is guarded by a friendly piece.

  • PlunderChess
 The capturing piece is allowed to temporarily take the moving abilities of the piece taken.

  • Pocket Knight Chess (or Tombola Chess)
 Players have an extra knight they keep at the side of the board.
 Once during the game, a player may place the knight on any empty square for his move.
 Play then proceeds as normal.

  • Portal Chess
 Any of a number of games that involve pieces or squares for teleportation around the board(s).

  • Progressive Chess
 The initial piece placement is the same as in regular chess, but in this players, rather than just making one move per turn, play progressively longer series of moves.

  • Racing Kings
 Players race kings to the 8th rank.
 Captures, but no checks or checkmate. "... one of the more inspired creations of Vernon Parton".[37]

  • Refusal chess (or Outlaw chess, Rejection chess)
 A played move can be refused by the opponent, forcing the first player to change to another move, which must be accepted.
 The only exception is when only one legal move is possible.

  • Replacement chess
 Captured pieces are not removed from the board but relocated by the capturer to any vacant square.

  • Rifle chess (or Shooting chess, Sniper chess)
 When capturing, the capturing piece remains unmoved on its original square, instead of occupying the square of the piece captured.

  • Three-check chess
 A player wins if he checks the opponent three times.

  • Way of the Knight
 Somewhat based on role-playing games, where pieces can improve their experience levels and so promote by capturing.

<2.2.1.1 Multimove variants>

 In these variants one or both players can move more than once per turn. The board and the pieces in these variants are the same as in standard chess.

  • Avalanche chess
 Each move consists of a standard chess move followed by a move of one of the opponent's pawns.

  • Chess (i,j)
 White gets i moves per turn and black gets j moves per turn.
 The destined winner is known for all (i,j) pairs except for (1,1) and (2,2).[41]
 The second author has offered a $1,000 prize for a proof that white wins, loses, or draws Chess (2,2).[citation needed]

  • Doublemove Chess <By Fred Galvin (1957)
 Similar to Marseillais chess, but with no en passant, check or checkmate.
 The object is to capture the king.

  • Double-Take Chess
 Each player, once per game, can make two moves during one of their turns.
 These two moves cannot be used to place the opponent's king in checkmate.

  • Kung-Fu chess
 A variant without turns.
 Any player can move any of his pieces at any given moment.

  • Marseillais chess (or Two-move chess)
 After the first turn of the game by White being a single move, each player moves twice per turn.

  • Monster chess (or Super King)
 White has the king and four pawns against the entire black army but may make two successive moves per turn.

  • Progressive chess (or Scottish chess)
 White moves once, then Black moves twice, then White moves three times, and so on.

<2.2.1.2 Incomplete information or elements of chance>

 In contrast to classical chess, these are not games of perfect information; luck or chance events are added as an element, such as in poker or backgammon.

  • ChessHeads
 Played with cards that change the game rules.

  • Dark chess
 The player sees only squares of the board that are attacked by their pieces.

  • Dice chess
 The pieces a player is able to move are determined by rolling a pair of dice.

  • Fantasy Chess
 Chess with wargaming added. Players fight for squares (which can be co-occupied) using dice. Can be expanded to four players; piece capability can improve each game.

  • Knightmare Chess
 Played with cards that change the game rules.

  • Kriegspiel
 Neither player knows where the opponent's pieces are but can deduce them with information from a referee.

  • No Stress Chess
 Marketed for teaching beginners, the piece(s) a player is able to move are determined by drawing from a deck of cards, with each card providing the rules for how the piece may move.
 Neither castling nor en passant is allowed.

  • Penultima
 An inductive variant where the players must deduce hidden rules invented by "Spectators".

  • Play It By Trust <By Yoko Ono (1966)
 Both players' pieces are white, which means after a few moves, players must learn to trust each other as to whose pieces are whose.

  • Schrödinger's chess
 Players' minor pieces are concealed so the opponent does not know what they are until revealed.
 When covered, pieces move in a restricted way (as queens that can only move two squares).

  • Synchronous chess
 Players try to outguess each other, moving simultaneously after privately recording intended moves and anticipated results.
 Incompatible moves, for instance to the same square with no anticipated capture, are replayed.
 Alternatively, two pieces moving to the same square are both captured, unless one is the king, in which case it captures the other.
 Play ends with capture of king.

  • Viennese Chess
 A barrier or screen between the two halves of the chessboard, two players then place their pieces on their half of the board.
 The barrier is then lifted and the game is then played as in orthodox chess.

<2.2.2 Unorthodox rules on an unorthodox board>

  • Alice Chess
 Played with two boards: a piece moved on one board passes "through the looking glass" onto the other board. By V. R. Parton (1953).

  • Apocalypse
 On a 5×5 board, each side has two knights and five pawns, win by eliminating all enemy pawns. Prepared moves are executed simultaneously. By C. S. Elliott (1976).

  • Chad
 Kings are limited to 3×3 "castles" on a 12×12 board dominated by eight rooks per side which can promote to queens. By Christian Freeling (1979).

  • Chessence
 Nine men per player move according to their relative positions to each other on a 6×9 board with missing squares and kings immobile in the corners. By Jim Winslow (1989).

  • Congo
 Kings (lions) are limited to 3×3 "castles" on a 7×7 board. By Demian Freeling (1982).

  • Diplomat chess
 Played on a circular board with 43 cells, including the centre circle which is considered orthogonal and diagonal to every adjacent cell. Includes a 'diplomat' piece which instead of capturing can suborn enemy pieces.[52]

  • Dragonfly
 Played on a 7×7 or hex board, no queens, captured non-pawn pieces never die (ala Chessgi) and can be dropped on any open square. By Christian Freeling.

  • Jesön Mor
 Nine knights per side on a 9×9 board. The first to occupy square e5, and then leave it, wins the game. From Mongolia.

  • Parallel Worlds Chess
 A 3D variant using three boards, each player commands two armies, capturing either enemy king wins. The middle board is a sort of "twilight zone" obeying its own rules. By R. Wayne Schmittberger (1980s).

  • Rollerball
 Inspired by the sci-fi film of the same name, pieces move clockwise around a Roller Derby-like track. By Jean-Louis Cazaux (1998).

  • Sovereign Chess
 This variant is played on a 16×16 board. In addition to the standard black and white pieces, the board is also encircled by 80 other coloured pieces (10 colours of 8 pieces each). Coloured squares near the center of the board correspond to the coloured pieces around the board, and when a player's piece occupies a coloured square, that player gains control of the matching coloured pieces. If a piece on a coloured square is moved or captured, control of the matching pieces is lost (transferred to the other player in case of capture). By Mark Bates.

  • Troy
 The Trojan war fought on a 91-cell hexagonal board. Achilles/Hector are immune from capture by Trojan/Greek soldiers. By the Fanaat games club (the Netherlands).

  • Zonal chess
 Board has triangular wings or "zones" on either side of the main 8×8 board. Queens, bishops and rooks that start from one of the squares in either zone may change direction and keep going on the same move. A queen, for example, could zig around an obstruction and attack a piece in the opposite zone. The power to change direction only applies when a piece's move starts from a zonal area. It is possible (using the queen and rook) to cross the board from one zone to another, but any piece entering a zone cannot make use of the extended move.

<2.3 Unorthodox rules using nontraditional pieces>

<2.3.1 Nontraditional (fairy) pieces on a standard 8×8 board>

 Most of the pieces in these variants are borrowed from chess.
 The game goal and rules are also very similar to those in chess; however, these variants include one or more fairy pieces which move differently from chess pieces.

  • Anti-King chess <By Peter Aronson (2002)
 Features an anti-king. This piece is in check when not attacked.
 If a player's anti-king is in check and unable to move to a square attacked by the opponent, the player loses (checkmate).
 The anti-king cannot capture enemy men, but can capture friendly men.
 A king may not attack the opponent's anti-king.
 The anti-king may not check its own king. Other rules the same as in standard chess, including check and checkmate to the regular king.

  • Baroque (or Ultima)
 Pieces on the first row move like queens, and pieces on the second row move like rooks.
 They are named after their unusual capturing methods.
 For example, leaper, immobilizer and coordinator.

  • Berolina chess
 Which uses the Berolina pawn instead of the normal pawn, all other things being equal.

  • Chess with different armies
 Two sides use different sets of fairy pieces.
 There are several armies of approximately equal strength to choose from including the standard FIDE chess army.

  • Duell
 Dice are used instead of pieces.

  • Falcon-Hunter Chess <By Karl Schulz (1943)
 A falcon moves forward as a bishop; backward as a rook.
 The hunter moves forward as a rook; backward as a bishop.
 Players introduce the fairies as the game progresses.

  • Grasshopper chess
 The pawns can promote to grasshopper, or grasshoppers are on the board in the initial position.

  • Pocket mutation chess
 Player can put a piece temporarily into the pocket, optionally mutating it into another (including fairy) piece.

  • Spartan chess
 Black (the Spartans) has an army headed by two kings, which otherwise consists exclusively of unorthodox pieces, and battles the standard FIDE army (the Persians) of white.

<2.3.1.1 Empress and/or princess pieces>

 There are a number of variants which use the empress (rook + knight) and princess (bishop + knight) compound pieces.
 The empress is also named marshall, chancellor, etc.[58]
 The princess is also called cardinal, archbishop, janus, paladin, etc.[59]
 Another compound piece is the amazon (queen + knight).
 To adapt to the new pieces, the board is usually extended to 10×8 or 10×10 with additional pawns added.[60]

  • Almost Chess <By Ralph Betza (1977)
 Uses an 8×8 board, with the conventional starting position, but queens are replaced by chancellors (empresses).

  • Sort of Almost Chess <By Ralph Betza (1994)
 A related variant, where one player has a queen and the other has a chancellor.

  • Capablanca chess
 A variant by the former world chess champion, José Raúl Capablanca.
 Played on a 10×8 board with chancellor (empress) and archbishop (princess).

  • Capablanca random chess <By Reinhard Scharnagl (2004)
 Generalises all possible variants of Capablanca chess with random starting positions following a method similar to that used in Chess960.

  • Chigorin Chess <By Ralph Betza (2002)
 Similar to Sort of Almost Chess, but White's minor pieces are all knights and Black's are all bishops.

  • Embassy Chess <By Kevin Hill (2005).
 Uses a 10×8 board with marshall (empress) and cardinal (princess).
 The starting position is borrowed from Grand Chess.

  • Gothic chess
 A commercial variant played on a 10×8 board with chancellor (empress) and archbishop (princess).

  • Grand Chess <By Christian Freeling (1984)
 Uses a 10×10 board with marshall (empress) and cardinal (princess).

  • Janus chess <By Werner Schöndorf (1978)
 Uses a 10×8 board with two januses (princesses).

  • Maharajah and the Sepoys
 Black has a complete army, White only one piece: the maharajah (amazon).

  • Modern Chess <By Gabriel Vicente Maura (1968)
 Played on a 9×9 board, with an extra pawn and a prime minister (princess).

  • Seirawan chess <By GM Yasser Seirawan and Bruce Harper (2007)
 A commercial variant. Uses a standard 8×8 board with elephant (empress) and hawk (princess).[61]

<2.3.1.2 Other unorthodox pieces>

 The pieces in these variants are borrowed from both chess and another game.
 The game goal and rules are either the same or very similar to those in chess.
 However, these variants include one or more fairy pieces which move differently from chess pieces.

  • Chessers <By Christopher Schwartz and Sander Beckers.
 Played on a regular chessboard but with checkers integrated with standard chess pieces.

  • Playing cards on a chessboard
 A card game allowing open play on a board with rectangular sectors, just as in chess or checkers, but with the application of playing cards.

  • Proteus <By Steve Jackson Games
 A chess variant using dice to represent normal chess pieces.

<2.3.2 Unorthodox pieces using unorthodox boards>

  • Bomberman chess
 Inspired by the Bomberman video game series.
 Played on a 10×8 board with special bomb and defuser pieces.
 The bomb can be exploded on its turn in vertical and horizontal directions (similar to the movement of a rook), destroying any pieces in the blast range.
 The defuser can capture a bomb.

  • Chesquerque <By George Dekle Sr.
 Played on four Alquerque boards combined.
 Includes an extra pawn and archbishop per side.

  • Chess on an Infinite plane
 One type of infinite chess.
 Seventy-six pieces are played on an unbounded chessboard.
 The game uses orthodox chess pieces, plus guards, hawks, and chancellors. The absence of borders makes pieces effectively less powerful (as the king and other pieces cannot be trapped in corners), so the added material helps compensate for this.[60]
 Despite the infinite playing area, mathematical investigations have shown that in a general endgame, one player can force a win in a finite number of moves.[67]
 There is also a sub-variant which uses the huygens, possibly making the game mathematically undecidable.[68]

  • Chess on a Really Big Board
 Played on a 16×16 board, with twelve piece types (six being the orthodox chess pieces).
 Has many subvariants, including a larger 24×24 version and a three-dimensional 16×16×16 version.

  • Dragonchess <By Gary Gygax(co-creator of Dungeons & Dragons)
 Uses three stacked 8×12 boards, with fantasy pieces.

  • Gess
 Chess with variable pieces, played on a Go board.

  • Omega chess
 On a 10×10 board with four extra squares, one per corner. Includes the champion and wizard fairy pieces.
Both are leapers, with different ways of leaping.

  • Raumschach
 Called "the classic 3D game" (Pritchard). Played on a 5×5×5 board, including a new piece (the unicorn) for moving through cube vertices.

  • Shako <By Jean Louis-Cazaux (1997).
 Played on a 10×10 board.
 New pieces are the cannon from xiangqi (Chinese chess) and an elephant moving as a fers+alfil of old shatranj (ancestors of queen and bishop), so diagonally one or two squares with jumps allowed.

  • Stealth chess
 Played in the fictional Ankh-Morpork Assassins' Guild from the Discworld series of books; played on an 8×10 board.
 The fairy piece is the Assassin.

  • Stratomic <By Robert Montay-Marsais (1972)
 Adds nuclear missiles to the standard chess array on a 10×10 board.
 When launched they irradiate any 3×3 area (friendly pieces included) except kings.

  • Triangular Chess: <By George Dekle Sr.
 Board comprises 96 triangles.
 The rook and bishop have three directions; the queen, six.
 Three extra pawns and a unicorn.

  • Tri-Chess
 A variation of Triangular Chess.
 The rook and bishop are increased to six directions; the queen, to twelve. By George Dekle Sr.

  • 2000 A.D. <By V. R. Parton
 Played on a 10×10 board, features the empress, capricorn, gorgon, chimaera, dragon, mimotaur, unicorn, and fury fairy chess pieces.

  • Wildebeest Chess <By R. Wayne Schmittberger (1987)
 Uses an 11×10 board, each player has two camels and a wildebeest (camel + knight).
 Pawns move one, two, or three squares initially.

  • Wolf Chess <By Arno von Wilpert (1943)
 On an 8×10 board, with fairy pieces wolf (empress), fox (princess), nightrider, sergeant (almost a Berolina pawn), and elephant (amazon).

<2.4 Single-player variants>

 Similar to solitaire, there are a few chess variants for a single player.
 Unlike chess puzzles, these variants have a random starting position.
 Some of these are similar to permutation chess problems, for example the game Queen's Quadrille, which was invented by Karen Robinson in 1998.

 All chess pieces (except pawns) are randomly placed on a 4×4 board.
 Then one of the queens is removed and the game is started.
 Pieces move as usual, however capturing is not allowed.
 A player can move white and black pieces in any order, without regard for colour.
 The goal is to move the queen along a predetermined pattern;
 for example from one corner to the other, or visit all squares on the board only once.

 The same idea is found in the game Hippodrome, which was invented by Andy Lewicki in 2003.
 The initial position is obtained by placing four knights on the first row and all other pieces from a chess set (except pawns) on the remaining fields.
 Then one of the pieces (except knights) is removed and the game is started.
 The goal is to move all knights to the opposite rank.

 In 1998 Robinson also invented a game which Hans Bodlaender named Chess Contradance, as the setup is like a contradance with the two lines facing each other.
 The pieces are setup as in regular chess, but without pawns.
 The first and eighth ranks are safe havens, i.e., no piece can be captured on these ranks.
 The object of the puzzle is to move the pieces such that all pieces move to the opposite back row without ever putting any piece in danger of being captured.
 Black and White alternate moves.

<2.5 Variants for more than two people>

  • Bosworth
 A four-player variant played on 6×6 board.
 It uses a special card system with the pieces for spawning.

  • Bughouse chess (or Exchange chess, Siamese chess, Swap chess, Tandem chess, Transfer Chess)
 Two teams of two players face each other on two boards.
 Allies use opposite colours and give captured pieces to their partner.
 The two-player version of the game, played with only one board, is Crazyhouse.

  • Business chess
 Played with two teams using normal chess playing rules but allowing up to five variations of the game.
 The team may discuss and play alternative moves freely.

  • Djambi
 Can be played by four players on a 9×9 board and four sets of special pieces.
 Pieces can capture or move those of an adversary. Captured pieces are not removed from the board, but turned upside down.
 There are variants for three or five players (Pentachiavel).

  • Enochian chess
 A four-player variant with magical symbolism, associated with the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

  • Forchess
 A four-player variant using the standard board and two sets of standard pieces.

  • Fortress chess
 A four-player variant played in Russia in 18th and 19th centuries.

  • Four-player chess (or Four-handed, Four-man, Four-way chess)
 Can be played by four people and uses a special board and four sets of differently coloured pieces.

  • Quatrochess <By George Dekle Sr.
 A four-player variant, in addition to the standard chess army, each side controls a chancellor, archbishop, mann, wazir, fers, two camels, and two giraffes.

  • Three-Man Chess <By George Dekle Sr.
 Three chessboard halves fused into one, first to checkmate wins.

  • Three-player chess
 A family of variants specially designed for three players.

  • Tri-Chess <By George Dekle Sr.
 For three players; 150 triangular cells; chancellor (empress) and cardinal (princess) replacing queen.

<2.6 Games inspired by chess>

  • Arimaa
 A game inspired by Garry Kasparov's defeat by chess computer Deep Blue.
 This game is easy for people to understand but difficult for computers to play well.
 To prove that Arimaa is computer resistant, a $10,000 USD prize is offered for developing a program to defeat the top human Arimaa players.

  • ChessWar
 Complex strategy game played with chess pieces and board.

  • Martian chess
 Played with Icehouse pieces.

  • Navia Dratp
 A cross between shogi and miniature wargaming.

  • The Duke
 An abstract strategy game where the board, pieces, and gameplay mechanics have some strong parallels with chess.

  • Flick Chess
 No rules chess. Players need to flick pieces to knock down the entire opponent's army.
 A mobile version was published by Sama Sama Studios.

  • For the Crown
 A cross between chess and a deck-building game where pieces must be purchased in-game.

  • Chess Evolved Online
 An online chess variant with customizable armies and Collectible Card Game elements.

<3.1 Historical>

  • Chaturaji:チャトラジ:Ancient India
  4人制のchaturanga,ダイスを使用

  • Chaturanga:チャトランガ:Ancient India
  チェス関連ゲームの共通の祖先

  • Shatranj:シャトランジ:Ancient Persia
  Chaturangaより派生

  • Tamerlane chess:チムール・チェス:Timur
  Shatranjより発展

  • Courier chess:クーリエ・チェス:Europe
  13世紀~19世紀のヨーロッパ
  Shatranjから現代チェス(Modern chess)への途中過程

  • Grant Acedrex(Medieval Chess)::Medieval Spanish
  13世紀のスペイン

  • Short assize::England,Paris
  12世紀後半のイギリスとパリ

<3.2 Regional>

  • Shogi:将棋:Japan

  • Janggi:チャンギ:Korea

  • Xiangqi:シャンチー:China
  • Banqi(Chinese Half chess):China
  • Game of the Three Kingdoms:China
  • Jungle(Dou Shou Qi,The Jungle Game,Jungle Chess,Animals Chess,Oriental Chess,Children's Chess):闘獣機:China

  • Chandraki:Tibet

  • Shatar:シャタル:Mongolia
  • Hiashatar:ヒャーシャタル:Mongolia

  • Makruk:マークルック(マックルック):Thailand

  • Sittuyin:シットゥイン:Burma

  • Khmer ouk:Cambodia(信憑性に異議あり)
  • Rek Chess:Cambodia

  • Main chator:Malaysia,Indonesia,Philippines

  • Samantsy:Madagascar

  • Senterej:Ethiopia


  • Wikipedia


最終更新:2020年06月04日 03:09