Phi Chess with Different Armies
Phi Chess is a variant inspired by the golden ratio, Phi.
Phi Chess with Different Armies is inspired by Ralph Betza's excellent Chess with Different Armies.
Setup
Phi Chess DA is played on a 13x8 board.
White sits on the bottom. The White King begins on g1; the Black King begins on g8.
Pieces
Phi Chess DA allows players to choose their own pieces for each game.
The first step is for players to agree on the limits:
- Number of simple pieces
- Number of compound pieces
- Limits on types of pawns
- Limits on particular piece-powers
- Etc.
Recommended limits:
- Six simple pieces
- Six compound pieces
- No more than six pieces that move as rooks.
Once limits are decided, players choose their 12 pieces and 13 pawns.
Pieces can be anything; Phi Chess is limited to Rooks, Bishops, Knights, and their three possible compounds (Queen, Jack/Marshall, Fool/Cardinal), but Phi Chess DA could allow Camels, Zebras, Cannons, or what have you unless players agree to exclude odd pieces beforehand. Triple-compounds such as the Amazon could be permitted if both players are down.
Likewise, players have a choice of pawns; one may prefer Berolina pawns while another prefers a mix of Orthodox and Shogi. Players may even agree to more powerful pawns, such as Ferzians vs Wazirs.
Once pieces and pawns have been chosen, each player sets up their array however they please - pawns on their second rank and pieces on their first. The King sits on the center square.
Rules
0. Phi Chess DA has the same rules as Phi Chess.Notes
Notes
The number of possible armies is staggering; something on the order of twelve kajillion. I think the added step of choosing pieces and arrays adds a new dimension to any variant.
Possibilites:
A quiet game with simple pieces
Queens and Knights vs Archbishops and Rooks
Phi Chigorin Chess
Playing Tips
Don't bother studying openings. :)
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By Joshua Morris.
Web page created: 2005-07-17. Web page last updated: 2005-07-17