I. Paulovits's
Paulovits's Game
featuring the General and the
Pasha
The objective is
checkmate. Pieces move as in orthodox chess, with the exception of the
additional pieces, the "General" and the "Pasha". The
General combines the moves of a King and a Camel (3+1 leap). The Pasha moves
like a Mastodon, that is, jumps one or two steps
orthogonally or diagonally. The pawns move as in orthodox chess, inclusive of
the initial double-step. The pawn can also make an initial triple-step. 'En
passant' can occur if the pawn moves two or three steps and passes a square
threatened by an enemy pawn. Castling exists, and the King jumps two squares on
the king side or four squares on the queen side. Promotion rules are the same as
in orthodox chess, with the addition of the General and Pasha.
The
General, Pasha, and Rook have all the value of 6 on this board. The Knight is
significantly weaker than a Bishop. K+Pasha wins against K+B or N, draws against
K+Q. K+G only draws against K+B or N.
Paulovits's Game was invented by
Note:
I am not certain of the castling and the 'en passant' rules, although these
rules are the most probable. The Classified Encyclopedia of Chess Variants
(2007) does not describe the full rules.
You can download my free
Paulovits Game program
here (updated
2008-01-17), 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 2007 May