Retiar Chess
introducing the Retiar

The Retiar is a
bifurcation piece. It always moves in two legs,
the first is a diagonal slide, and the second is an orthogonal bounce-move,
along either of two orthogonals in the prolonged movement-direction. If the
Retiar cannot bounce, then it cannot move. The Retiar 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 knight file. The Retiar'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 Retiar.
The H-shaped board gives the Retiar good strategical
possibilities. The initial setup divests the Retiar of immediate attacking
possibilities, thus avoiding strategical monotony. Although the Retiar is
dependent on screens for moving it is a very dynamic and difficult piece that
puts great demands on the chessplayer. The extra corner squares (the trenches)
are exactly what the majesty has always asked for. The notorious problem of the
weak first rank, and the sudden rook mate, is thereby solved. The trenches
affect the strategy greatly. While the Retiar can easily create threats on the
first rank, these squares are often useful to the king. Retiar Chess, and the
new Retiar piece, were invented by undersigned, September 2006.
The
Retiar (lat. retiarius), the "net man", was one of the
best-known gladiator types in ancient Rome. The Retiar was armed with net and
trident. He lacked helmet and shield, but instead wore a big shoulder guard.
|
|
|
|
You can download my free Retiar
Chess program
here, 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).