Scandinavian Chess
a development of
Capablanca's chess

In Scandinavian
Chess the objective is checkmate. Pieces move as in orthodox chess, with the
exception of the two additional pieces deriving from Capablanca's Chess.
These are the Archbichop (which combines the moves of Bishop and Knight)
and the Chancellor (which combines the moves of Rook and Knight). The
pawns move as in orthodox chess, but have no initial double move. As the pawns
are all located on the third rank, they can reach the fourth rank immediately
anyway. When castling, the King jumps three squares instead of two. Promotion
rules are the same as in orthodox chess (with the addition of Archbishop and
Chancellor).
In the first phase the players take turns to drop pieces
on the board, either behind the pawn chain, or on a friendly pawn. In the latter
case the removed friendly pawn must immediately be relocated to another empty
position, that is, somewhere on the second rank. The two Bishops must be dropped
on different colours. The King and Rooks are initially placed on their standard
positions. They are immobile until all pieces have been dropped. After all the
pieces have been dropped the play begins.
Scandinavian Chess was invented and implemented by undersigned, April
2006. Inspirational sources are Swedish Chess
and Capablanca's Chess. The piece set is
the same as in Capablanca's Chess.
There exists an alternative variant
of Scandinavian Chess where all pieces, except pawns, are exterior. In
this case castling doesn't exist, and the Rooks must be dropped on the first
rank. The following image is an example.
Example
of opening position after all pieces have been dropped and pawns relocated.
White can now begin by playing f3-f4, for instance.
Chess
variants featuring big boards have been invented before, most notably
Tamerlane
Chess, allegedly invented by
Always give your King a
protected position, preferably near the corner. You can relocate the pawns so
that they protect the King. Remember that relocated pawns have no initial double
move, so it takes longer to activate such pawns. In the opening phase, the same
pawn can be relocated several times, by dropping pieces on it. Keep the pawns in
the centre, because centre pawns are valuable. Look for ways to exchange lower
valued pieces for larger valued ones.
(Don't miss my other chess variants.)
| You can download my free
Scandinavian Chess program
here (updated
2006-05-11), but you must own the software
Zillions of Games to be able to
run it.
|
© M.
Winther 2006