Crossbishop Chess
introducing the Crossbishop

The Crossbishop is a
bifurcation piece. It slides like a rook. But
to capture it must jump over any piece to the next square and then continue diagonally
in the prolonged movement direction (two possible directions). The square
immediately behind the jumped piece must be empty ("weak"
Crossbishop). The Crossbishop's value is 3, that is, the same as a bishop or
knight. Otherwise the rules are the same as in standard chess, except for the
possible promotion to Crossbishop.
Although the Crossbishop loses 'screens' for jumping when the pieces
become fewer, it becomes more mobile when the orthogonals are cleared from
pieces. Thus it often retains its value in the endgame. Note that the
Crossbishop can have a big influence from behind the friendly pawn chain,
especially if it can slide along the first rank.
The 68-squared
Gustavian board makes it possible to place additional pieces on the board
without substantially increasing the board size. This often means that a
strategical and tactical tension is maintained. It also brings the advantage
that bishops and knights remain equal in value. Crossbishop Chess, and
the new Crossbishop piece, were invented by undersigned, August 2006. There is
also a variant where
Scorpions take the place of the pawns.
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You
can download my free Crossbishop Chess program
here (updated
2007-10-30), but you must own the software
Zillions of Games to be able to
run it. Don't
miss my other
chess variants. |
© M. Winther (August 2006).