R. W. Schmittberger's
Airplane Chess
introducing the Airplane
The objective is
checkmate. Pieces move as in orthodox chess, with the exception of the
additional pieces, the "Airplane", the "Minister" (N+R), and
the "Cardinal" (N+B). The Cardinal slides like a bishop or leaps like
a knight. It is somewhat weaker than a queen. The Minister slides like a rook or
leaps like a knight. Its value corresponds to a queen. The Airplane flies to any
empty square orthogonally or diagonally. It captures an enemy piece by landing
immediately beyond its victim. On this board the Airplane's value corresponds to
a rook (my estimate).
The pawns move as in orthodox chess, inclusive of
the initial double-step. The pawns, except the centre pawns, can also make an
initial triple-step. 'En passant' can occur if the pawn moves two or three steps
and passes a square threatened by an enemy pawn. Castling exists, but the King
jumps three squares. Promotion rules are the same as in orthodox chess, with the
addition of the extra pieces. The Airplane cannot force a mate together with a
king. The defending party can step into the corner. If you advance too boldly
with the pawns, they can easily fall prey to the Airplane. Airplane Chess was
invented by
|
|
You can download my free
Airplane Chess program
here (updated
2007-11-15), but you must own the software
Zillions of Games to be able to
run it (I recommend the download version). Don't miss my other
chess variants. |
© M.
Winther 2007 May