Castalia Chess
introducing the Castalia

The Castalia moves like a queen, any
distance in any direction, but it cannot capture. The Castalia can repulse an
enemy piece ahead and attract any piece to the rear. (1) The Castalia kidnaps a
piece located behind itself by dragging it to the square which the Castalia was
positioned on. The kidnapped piece, which can be of any colour, is the nearest
piece in the opposite direction of the move. (2) An enemy piece can be repulsed,
concurrently with the kidnap move, if the Castalia stops next to it. The enemy
piece is repulsed to the remotest empty square in the alignment direction. In
case of a pawn, it cannot be pushed back to the first rank, that is, the second
rank is the limit. A pawn that is pushed to its promotion square is promoted to
a queen, as only option. Other rules are the same as in standard chess, except
for the possible promotion to Castalia. The Castalia's value is 3, that is, like
a knight or bishop (preliminary estimate).
If it is maneuvered to good
positions the Castalia is very efficient. It can kidnap enemy pieces, which can
subsequently be attacked, or it can improve the positions of the friendly
pieces. Friendly pawns can be brought nearer to the promotion square. Broken
pawn chains can be repaired. A pawn that has advanced two steps can be retracted
one or two steps. This means that the pawn's double-step is less critical. This
piece introduces new interesting problems to the chessplayer. Castalia chess,
and the new Castalia piece, were invented by undersigned, October 2006.
Note:
in an alternative variant the Castalia can only kidnap a piece if it moves one
step. The 'weak' Castalia can better decide whether it wants to kidnap a piece.
It can avoid dragging the piece along by moving farther than one step.
Castalia
was the name of a nymph who threw herself into or was transformed into a spring
to evade the pursuit of Apollo. The spring was then named after her, and it was
a source of inspiration for Apollo and the Muses. The Muses were sometimes
called Castalides because of their association with the spring.
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You
can download my free Castalia Chess program
here (updated
2007-02-17), 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 (October 2006).