Amiral Chess
introducing the Amiral

The Amiral is a
bifurcation piece. It slides like a queen. It
can make a capture by performing a move in two legs, by changing from orthogonal
to diagonal, or vice versa. In case of a diagonal move, it can make a capture by
bouncing orthogonally on a piece of any colour positioned to the side of
the diagonal, and land on an enemy piece somewhere on the orthogonal, provided
that any intermediate squares are empty. The capture move is performed in the
prolonged movement direction only (two direction alternatives). While the Amiral
slides along a diagonal, several orthogonals (in the prolonged movement
direction) could be chosen, provided that there exist screens for bouncing. In
case of an orthogonal move, it can initiate capture on a diagonal. It functions
similarly as described. The Amiral's value is 5, that is, the same as a rook
(preliminary estimate). Other rules are the same as in standard chess, except
for the possible promotion to Amiral.
One would expect this piece to
lose power when screens for bouncing become fewer in the endgame. It appears,
however, like it cooperates finely with friendly pieces. The king, for instance,
can advance and position himself so that the Amiral can bounce on him, thereby
causing threats. Hence this piece, unlike its cannon relatives, retains its
value in the endgame. It is a highly cooperative piece, something which makes it
interesting for the positional player. "Amiral" is a suitable name
for this piece, while its movement is reminiscent of a sailing warship. It
cruises between the pieces. In order to attack it needs wind in the stern.
Amiral Chess, and the new Amiral piece, were invented by undersigned, September
2006.
Amiral [Arab 'lord of the (sea)'] a :
flag officer b : a commissioned officer in the navy or coast
guard who ranks above a vice admiral and whose insignia is four stars
c (archaic) : flagship.
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You
can download my free Amiral Chess program
here (updated
2007-07-10), 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 (September 2006).