Samnis Chess
introducing the Samnis

The Samnis is a
bifurcation piece. It can move in two legs, the
first is an orthogonal slide, and the second is a diagonal bounce-move, along
either of two diagonals in the prolonged movement-direction. It can only capture
like a rook, by jumping directly to the enemy piece, provided that any
intermediate squares are empty. While the Samnis slides along an orthogonal,
several diagonals (in the prolonged movement direction) could be chosen,
provided that there exist screens for bouncing. The Samnis also bounces against
the side of the board, but then only one movement direction is possible. The
Samnis's value is 5, that is, the same as a rook. Other rules are the same as in
standard chess, except for the possible promotion to Samnis. The Samnis is a
highly cooperative piece, something which makes it interesting for the
positional player. Although the Samnis is dependent on screens for moving it is
a very dynamic piece that puts great demands on the chessplayer. Samnis Chess,
and the new Samnis piece, were invented by undersigned, October 2006.
The
Samnis was one of the earliest types of gladiators in ancient Rome. The
name derives from the Samnites, which were among the earliest enemies of the
emerging Roman empire. They were equipped with sword, visored helmet, and a long
rectangular shield.
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You can download my free Samnis
Chess program
here, but you must own the software
Zillions of Games to be able to
run it. Don't
miss my other
chess variants. |
© M. Winther
(October 2006).