Helmsman Chess
introducing the Helmsman

The Helmsman is a
bifurcation piece. It slides like a bishop.
Following the 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 Helmsman slides along a diagonal,
several orthogonals (in the prolonged movement direction) could be chosen,
provided that there exist screens for bouncing. The Helmsman also bounces
against the side of the board, but this is only geometrically possible when it
moves from one of the extra corner squares, and bounces along the second rank.
The Helmsman's value is 3, that is, the same as a bishop or knight (preliminary
estimate). Other rules are the same as in standard chess, except for the
possible promotion to Helmsman.
The Helmsman is an attractive piece,
specially suited for the positional player. 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 Helmsman 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. A similar two leg capture move, diagonal
to orthogonal, also exists in the Doublebarrel, which is a form of cannon. "Helmsman"
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. Helmsman Chess, and the new Helmsman piece, were invented by
undersigned, September 2006.
Helmsman (1627) : the person at
the helm : steersman.
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You
can download my free Helmsman Chess program
here (updated
2007-10-19), 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).