Zeppelin Chess
Dragonet Chess
introducing the Zeppelin
and
the Dragonet

The objective is
checkmate. Pieces move as in orthodox chess, with the exception of the
additional piece, the "Zeppelin". The Zeppelin flies to any empty
square orthogonally, ie. the rook-directions. This means that it can also fly
directly, from one of the extra corner squares, to the opposite corner square in
the enemy position. It captures an enemy piece by landing immediately beyond its
victim. On this board the Zeppelin's value corresponds to a bishop (estimate).
Extended
castle rule: when castling the king may jump three squares, but it can also jump
two as usual. The rook ends up on its usual square. The extended castle rule
makes play on the wings easier to achieve. The king can immediately control the
kingside corner square thus preventing the intervention of a Zeppelin.
The
Zeppelin cannot force a mate together with a king. The defending party can step
into the corner. If you advance too boldly with the pawns, they can easily
become victims of the Zeppelin. The Zeppelin piece is a weaker version of the
Airplane, which was invented by
There is an alternative variant with
"Crabs" instead of pawns. In yet another variant "Kwaggas"
take the place of the knights. The Kwagga, which is my invention, moves like an
extended knight, 3+1. It can multiply jumps, but only capture on the first.
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Dragonet Chess uses
the same initial setup. It features a new piece, the Dragonet.
The Dragonet ('little dragon') flies to
any empty square, of the same colour, in any direction. It captures an enemy
piece by landing immediately beyond its victim. The Dragonet's value is 4, i.e.
light piece + pawn (estimate). It's a colourbound modification, by me, of
Schmittberger's Airplane.
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You can download my free
Zeppelin Chess program
here (updated
2009-10-29), but you must own the software
Zillions of Games to be able to
run it (I recommend the download version). You can play Zeppelin Chess
online and by e-mail
here. Don't miss my other
chess variants. |
© M.
Winther 2007 May