Bodyguard Chess
featuring the Bodyguard
introducing
the Kwagga

In Bodyguard Chess
the pieces move as in orthodox chess, with the exception of the additional
pieces, the Bodyguard and the Kvagga. The Bodyguard slides one
or two steps in any direction. It has about the same value as a queen (my
estimate). The Bodyguard can stymie the movement of enemy pieces. This implies
that an enemy piece can only move one square at at time so long its movement
occurs on the squares immediately surrounding the Bodyguard (an enemy Kwagga
will lose its second leap). Unlike the Mongolian Bodyguard, this version is
capable of checkmating the enemy king.
The Kwagga (striped horses
above) moves like an extended knight, three squares orthogonally plus one step
to the side. It can multiply this jump in the same direction. This means that
the Kwagga moves like a Camelrider. However, unlike the Camelrider, the Kwagga
can only capture on the first jump, and the next square must be empty. The
Kwagga is as valuable as a bishop (my estimate). Due to the 9x9 board, castling
is "long" on both sides.
Thanks to its stymieing capability
the Bodyguard is immune against long-range attacks from enemy queen, rook, and
bishop. This also means that these pieces cannot easily guard friendly pieces
being threatened by an enemy Bodyguard. This makes the Bodyguard a very useful
attacking piece in the middlegame. If the Bodyguard is placed centrally during
the middlegame, it effectively stymies the long-range enemy pieces. The Kwagga,
however, remains a serious threat to the Bodyguard. All other pieces must be
positioned next to the Bodyguard if they are going to capture it.
The
Kwagga's properties are very special. Like the bishop it always moves on the
same square colour. On this board it can maximally make two jumps in the same
direction. Thanks to its long leaps it can make threats behind the enemy lines.
It can be a very irritating piece. It is much stronger and maneuverable than a
Camel, and, since it cannot capture on the second leg, it is less brutal than a
Camelrider. These properties make it an accessible piece, and its movement is
not overly hard to calculate. It seems like its value is on a par with the
bishop, regardless of board size. This is a great advantage compared with the
knight. On a 10x10 board, the knight becomes significantly weaker than a bishop,
something which complicates the strategical situation, and perhaps makes the
game less accessible.
The Bodyguard piece derives from
Hiashatar, a Mongolian variant. The only
difference is that this very version is capable of checking and checkmating the
enemy king. This, and the fact that the board is smaller than in Hiashatar,
makes this version of the Bodyguard much more powerful. The kwagga (quagga), now
extinct, was a mammal (Equus quagga) of southern Africa related to the zebras.
In the kwagga, the striping was confined to the head, neck, and forequarters,
the back being solid brown. Bodyguard Chess, and the new Kwagga piece, were
invented by undersigned, November 2006.
Examples
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You can download my free
Bodyguard Chess program
here (updated
2006-11-23), 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 2006