Scorpion Chess
introducing the
dangerous Scorpion pawn
The only difference between Scorpion
Chess and regular chess is the additional movement directions of the pawn,
which is called Scorpion. The Scorpion has the additional moves of a
knight, but only in two forward directions: east-north-east, and west-north-west.
There are no additional capture moves. The Scorpion's value is half the value of
a knight or bishop, that is, 1.5. This means that a light piece can be exchanged
for two Scorpions, a possibility which often occurs. In the endgame it could
become very dangerous, and its value often increases.
The two
oblique moves in the image are the Scorpions two extra movement possibilities.
It can only capture like a regular pawn. The enemy king, or any piece, can
safely occupy the oblique squares, as they are not threatened there.
Scorpion Chess, and the new Scorpion pawn, were
invented by undersigned, May 2006. The Scorpion opens up many new tactical
possiblities, both in the defense and the attack. The endgame is much more
aggressive, while Scorpions, unlike pawns, are not easy to block. In Scorpion
Chess, drawish endgames won't occur often. Unlike in orthodox chess, a
broken pawn chain is not a big defect while the Scorpion pawn chain is not
static. Castling could be dangerous if the opponent has not yet castled, since
the rook file can be opened by a sideways moving Scorpion. A king that lingers
in the centre can be protected by sideways moving Scorpions. Two Scorpion pawns
equal a light piece. This contributes to the stability of the positions, despite
the increase in the tactical possibilities. A strategical depth is retained,
while new tactical themes are introduced. This game has some very fine
qualities.
There is also a variant, called Randomscorpion Chess,
where the opening setup for the Scorpions is chosen randomly, while satisfying
the condition that the Scorpions must be either placed on the second or third
rank. There are 256 possible configurations. All of them are sound and balanced,
and fully playable. Black's setup mirrors white's.
You
can download my free Scorpion Chess program
here (updated
2006-06-13), but you must own the software
Zillions of Games to be able to
run it.
Try playing
Scorpion Chess by e-mail, against a human opponent,
here. ...or try the randomized
version,
here. Don't miss my other
chess variants. |
© M. Winther
2006