Comments by SamTrenholme
Since this comment is for a page that has not been published yet, you must be signed in to read it.
Right now, Vladimir Kramnik is the world chess champion. Ever since Kasparov left FIDE, FIDE has not been considered the determiner of the world chess champion. Of course, it is only a matter of time before a computer becomes the world champion.
Some clarifications: * Fischer is no longer in jail. He is in Iceland. * The Washington Post has an editor who doesn't seem to like this fact.
Hey, Greg, I just asked the editors to delete the image of ChessV playing Gothic Chess and removed the Gothic Chess mention from the ChessV page there, since you do not want it. If other editors try to restore this stuff; well, I've been in edit wars before.
My main concern, just looking at this, is the color imbalance; one player controls the white squares; the other player controls the black squares. It is a maxim in traditional FIDE chess that bishops of opposite colors are draws; I am concerned that this game may be drawish. I haven't tested it, of course. - Sam
This game looks to be very strategic; I would venture to say that this game has about the same strategy/tactics balance as FIDE Chess, while being richer in both aspects. The main disadvantage appears to be that this variant will probably result in longer games than FIDE chess; a blitz game is probably game/10 or game/15 instead of game/5; a tournament game would probably take four to six hours instead of two hours. I especially like Greg Strong's method of coming up with this opening setup. Perhaps a similar heuristic can be designed so that a random chess variant makes for a playable game (the pieces are chosen randomly or semi-randomly, then the opening setup is chosen at random until we find one with a good balance).
I have a black and white version of the board here: http://www.samiam.org/new-ivorytower9x10-bw.bmp - Sam
The zip file is not available here. Look here for this excellent game:
ftp://ftp.zillionsofgames.com/games/IvoryTower.zip
- Sam
P.S. How do I change my password?
I must confess my favorite lines in ortho-chess are the somewhat dubious gambits--the Evans, the Latvian, the Fried Liver Attack, to name three examples. Anyway, I wish your newsletter the best of luck.
The problem with the Dunst Opening is 1... d5 followed by 2... d4, forcing white to move a piece twice. The problem with 1. Nc3 d5 2. d4 is that White now can not do the Queen's gambit. These disadvantages may be offset by getting black out of his book, and playing a line where one knows the traps far better than the other player.
As a chess variants enthuiast, I also see the appeal of having an offbeat opening result in something that doesn't quite feel like chess. Ralph Betza once pointed out that if you want FIDE (modern western) chess to feel like a chess variant, play the Boden-Kieseritzky gambit (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Nf6 4.Nc3 Nxe4 5.O-O).
The way I see it, anything that is reasonable in the first ten moves of chess has already been analyzed and studied by someone. FIDE Chess is a very well-trodden area, where interesting novelties are hard to find. However, there are literally an infinite number of chess variants (Chess is probably more malleable than any other abstract game) and very few of the variants have been explored at all. As just one tiny example, the variant that I just published (shameless plug) shares many pattens with FIDE chess openings, but is a almost completely uncharted territory for people looking for new ground to explore.
Just my two cents.
- Sam
I notice that the Chess variant pages are also inheriting another problem of Usenet: Poor variants (as in, with bad names, or with poorly written rules) are getting a lot more comments and attention than good variants (cough, cough shameless plug cough, cough).
I find it ironic that, seven years after this variant was proposed, people finally make a big fuss over its name. This is not the only Grand Chess variant, and won't be the last Grand Chess variant. Unlike 'Grand Chess 2', which implies the variant was invented by the same person who invented the original game, 'Grander Chess' is more clearly seen to be something invented (or fine-tuned) by someone else.
The whole 'protect all of the pawns' business comes from two things:
- Sam |
Gary, I think I am going to have to invite you to play an informal (FIDE) Chess game with me, with you taking the white pieces. I've never played a Game Courier game before, so this will be new for me.
Two questions: Can we use books and computer listings of other games using a given opening (I presume yes)? Can we use computers to help us with the tactics (I presume no)? Why do I get the feeling this game will start off with 1. Nc3? You're the first person I have known to like the Dunst; I have always read that it is weak. I researched it a little since Zillions likes opening with the Dunst (Zillions really likes moving the knights out early when playing FIDE chess). Now I have to figure out how to get a Game Courier account. - Sam |
Where do these beautiful graphics come from? I've never seen the 'Galatic' graphics before. Are these graphics copyrighted? What license are the graphics released under?
Thanks for your time. - Sam |
My impression: This game will probably need a 'bare amazon' rule (if all pieces except the amazon are taken, the person with just the amazon loses).
I am also very leery of games where the royal piece becomes very powerful; my worry is that this will result in more drawish games, since it is not practical to mount an attack against the opponent's royal piece. Strategys like sacrificing a piece to get a strong attack against the opponent's king (think FIDE Chess world champions Morphy and Tal) just don't work because the amazon can too easily retreat. - Sam |
The idea of having two royal pieces, where checkmating either piece wins (or forking both pieces with a defended piece), I think makes for a game with more tension than FIDE Chess. I especially like one of the royal pieces being very powerful; an Amazon usually is too powerful, but making it royal is a brilliant way of restraining its power.
- Sam |
I like this idea because I like the idea of having a chess variant template which makes for a huge number of playable games; I'm not just talking about the 960 games of Fischer Random Chess or the 252,000 possible games using a 8x10 Carrera setup where the bishops are on opposite colors; I'm talking a Chess variant that allows a number of games with a number like 6,670,903,752,021,072,936,960 (the number of possible Sudoku solutions).
One idea: Each pawn can be one of nine different pawn types:
For the pieces, any of the pieces, except the king, can have any of the 15 combinations of rook, knight, bishop, and camel movements. The king exists in three forms: Can move as a ferz, can move as a wazir, and can move as a FIDE chess king. For an 8 * 8 board, this results in 512,578,125 possible setups; combine this with the pawns above and our 8x8 board now has 22,064,807,537,578,125 possible opening setups. The corresponding 8x10/10x10 board has 402,131,117,372,361,328,125 possible opening setups. Now we're starting to get what looks like a variant template with a decent number of possible starting setups. :) As a practical matter, this template for the pieces probably usually results in arrays where white has a considerable advantage because there is so much force on the board, but this is a thought experiment, not a practical Chess variant design. This might work a little better: Make the atoms Betza's crab (leaps from e4 to d6, f6, c3, and g3), a fers, a wazir, and a camel. But that probably makes most setups too weak. Perhaps if we add a randomizing factor with these weak atoms whick randomly strengthens one of the atoms (makes the ferz atom a bishop atom, a wazir a rook, a crab a knight, and a camel a camel + dabbah). This causes each piece to have one of 32 possible forms; for an 8x8 board this results in a grand total of 4,437,222,213,480,873,984 possible setups; for a 10x8 or 10x10 board, this results in 368,040,959,274,957,611,728,896 possible setups. |
- Sam
25 comments displayed
Permalink to the exact comments currently displayed.