Embassy chess: Difference between revisions
Reinhard Scharnagl, Ed Trice and Christian Freeling have nothing to do in this article to Embassy Chess. A link to Kevin Hill's page would do, though.ُ |
Oğuz Ergin (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 70: | Line 70: | ||
[[Category:Chess variants]] |
[[Category:Chess variants]] |
||
[[Category:Capablanca chess variants]] |
[[Category:Capablanca chess variants]] |
||
[[tr:Elçilik satrancı]] |
Revision as of 21:04, 20 March 2008
Embassy chess is a chess variant created in 2005 by Kevin Hill. It borrows the opening setup from Grand chess by Christian Freeling and adapts it to the 8x10 board.
Embassy chess is a free, non-commercial Capablanca random chess variant that is played on a 8x10 board with two additional pawns per side and two fairy chess pieces: the marshall and the cardinal.[1]
The castling in this chess variant is done by king moving 3 spaces in rook direction, see diagram at right. All other rules, like en passant are the same as in chess.
Computer implementations
Embassy chess is supported by at least three multi-variant programs available in the chess variant world. It was selected as one out of seven 8x10 board games featured in SMIRF (developed by Reinhard Scharnagl). It was selected as one out of eleven 8x10 board games featured in ChessV (developed by Gregory Strong). In both programs, its opening setup can conveniently, automatically be loaded for play against a computer opponent.
It is also possible to play Embassy chess in Zillions of Games using a third-party rules file, such as this one.
See also
References
- ^ Embassy chess rules by Filip Rachunek.
External links
- Game Courier | Embassy Chess
- ChessV
- BrainKing - a server where you can play Embassy Chess.
- CRC | material values of pieces
- select CRC analysis tool