Geminus Chess
twinmove
drop-chess

Introduction
In Geminus Chess the objective is to capture the enemy king.
Pieces move as in orthodox chess. The pawns also move as in orthodox chess, but
have no initial double move. As the pawns are all located on the third rank,
they can reach the fourth rank immediately anyway. Castling doesn't exist. In
the first phase the players take turns to drop pieces on the board (two moves
per turn), either behind the pawn chain, or on a friendly pawn. In the latter
case the removed friendly pawn must immediately be relocated to another empty
position, that is, somewhere on the second rank. The rooks must only be dropped
on the first rank. The two bishops must be dropped on different colours. After
all the pieces have been dropped the play begins.
Geminus Chess
is a double-move variant. The double-move, after the dropping phase, is
constituted by a pawn move followed by a piece move, which is mandatory. There
exist two variants of Geminus Chess. In one variant pawn moves are
compelled, until there exist no more pawn moves, when the pieces can continue
moving without being preceded by a pawn move. Should a pawn become free to move
again, it is compelled to move. In the other variant the player may abstain from
the pawn move, and instead move a piece, but then he has lost his double-move.
Note
that a player, when the king is threatened, can make a pawn move before taking
measures to protect the king. He can also make a pawn move that discloses his
king to an enemy piece, but he is well adviced to protect his king in the
subsequent move. This implementation only allows promotion to queen.
Always give your king a protected position, preferably near the corner. You can
relocate the pawns so that they protect the king. If the king is placed on the
opposite wing as the enemy king then the game is likely to be combative. If the
king is placed on the same wing as the opponent, then the game is more likely to
be positional, that is, more peaceful. Remember that relocated pawns on the
second rank have no initial double move, so it takes longer to activate such
pawns. In the opening phase, the same pawn can be relocated several times, by
dropping pieces on it. Keep the pawns in the centre, because center pawns are
valuable.
Discussion
Geminus Chess was
invented and implemented by undersigned, May 2006. It is a combination of
Swedish Chess and Twinmove
Chess. In Geminus Chess the 'en passant' capture, the pawn's double
step, and castling, are all redundant. The name is inspired by the two-faced
Roman god
What contributes to its
ambivalent is the fact that pawn moves are both for good and bad. It's not
always advantageous to move a pawn. This circumstance creates a strategical
tension in the game. Pawn moves often cause irreparable damage to the position.
In the variant with compulsory pawn moves, to be forced to make that
extra pawn move could sometimes be regarded a punishment, rather than a reward.
In the variant with uncompelled pawn moves the situation is less acute,
since one is not forced to weaken one's pawn chain in critical situations. The
positional laws of chess are fully valid in the uncompelled variant,
although the double-move creates interesting tactical possibilities, both in
defense and attack.
(Don't miss my other chess variants.)
You can download my free Geminus Chess program here (updated 2006-05-10) , but you must own the software Zillions of Games to be able to run it.
© M. Winther 2006