Neoteric Chess
relocation chess with
extra piece
In Neoteric Chess
(N-chess) one extra piece per player is placed in the reserve. The piece is
automatically introduced at the position that is first left vacant when a
piece leaves its initial square. The piece that first moves will also
bring the external piece into play, so it is a double-move, comparable to
castling.
Neoteric Chess is also a relocation
variant. Before play begins, Black can decide the initial positions of the
kings, and White can then decide the initial positions of the queens. The
positions must mirror each other. Neoteric Chess is like standard chess except
that the players can, before play begins, swap places of the king + queen and
another piece. The king may not swap with any of the rooks. The queen can be
swapped with one of the rooks provided that the king remains between the rooks
(this is a requirement of Chess960).
Thus, when the king is swapped
(relocated), the other piece (the relocatee) ends up on the king's square.
When the queen is swapped, the relocatee ends up on the queen's square. One
restriction is that the bishops mustn't end up on the same square colour, and
the king cannot become a relocatee (i.e. swapped by the queen). Note that
black begins by swapping his king. Alternatively he can choose to leave the
position as it is (by pressing the king). The white player then mirrors
black's swap. After the kings thus have been swapped the turn is still with
white. White can now relocate the queen, if he so wishes, and black then mirrors
this. Next white starts the game by making the first move.
Note that the king retains his castling rights even if it has been
relocated. The castling rules are simple and derive from Chess960. King and
rook end up on their usual squares. The only difference is that the king can
make longer leaps than usual (or shorter, or none at all). All squares between
king and rook must be empty and unthreatened.
NOTE! If the King starts
the game on a castling destination square (c or g), castling on that side is
done by moving the Rook instead of the King.
With these relocation
rules the bishops are always positioned so that there is still a choice to
develop them on either of the queen's or the king's wing. There is at least one
rook in its standard position. This maintains the strategical ambiguity of the
initial position, while sound positions are produced where no definitive
advantage can be obtained. Black relocates first. Thusly white gets a chance
to make a strategical decision and create an initiative, as in the standard
position. The possible twentyfive initial positions are a subgroup of Fischer
Random Chess. The most conservative relocation, it seems, is to change place
between king and queen, which is a convenient way of avoiding theory. Remember
that the resultant castling positions are always the same as in standard
chess. This variant can also be played without the relocation feature and is
then called Reserve Chess.
This
implementation will allow the user to test which pieces are suitable. It will be
enhanced with more alternative pieces in later editions. Neoteric Chess is a
relocation variant, designed to overcome the problem of opening monotony.
Arguably, this method of reconfiguration of the initial array makes the
procedure of Fischer randomization redundant. It also answers to the
chessplayer's predilection for remaining in control.
The piece that first
moves will also bring the external piece into play.
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So far, these pieces have been
implemented:
Swedish Cannon, Chancellor,
Archbishop, Amazon,
Mastodon, Dimachaer,
Trebuchet, Kwagga,
Divaricator,
Murmillo, Culverin,
Belfry,
Adjutant and
Zeppelin, Consul, Dragonet, Camel (3+1), Llama,
Alpaca, Guanaco, and Vicuña (see below).
The Consul jumps like a Camel
(3+1), or slides orthogonally on the same square colour only. The other square
colour is simply ignored. It is a colourbound piece which is worth 5 (estimate).
Note that it cannot jump over occupied squares of its own colour.
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The Dragonet ('little dragon')
flies to any empty square, of the same colour, in any direction. It
captures an enemy piece by landing immediately beyond its victim. The Dragonet's
value is 4, i.e. light piece + pawn (estimate). It's a colourbound variant of
Schmittberger's Airplane, and was invented by me in Oct 2009.
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The Lama
family of pieces jump orthogonally on every second square, but have only four
capture squares. They can, however, easily change square colour by moving to the
adjacent orthogonal square. Any pair of these pieces can achieve checkmate
together with a king.
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You can download my free
Neoteric Chess program
here (updated
2011-02-21), but you must own the software
Zillions of Games
to be able to run it (I recommend the download version). You can play Dragonet Chess (a
variant of Neoteric Chess without relocation) against a human opponent
here. Don't miss my other
chess variants. |
© M.
Winther, 2011 January