Enter Your Reply The Comment You're Replying To Alfred Pfeiffer wrote on Thu, Jun 1, 2006 09:33 AM UTC:Hello Mats, you wrote I think the asymmetry in Elk Chess is probably good. It creates a strategical tension, and castling will tend to be on different wings. Moreover, should it not be asymetric, then the Elks would tend to be exchanged immediately, e.g., 1.Eg3 Eg6. Your arguments are plausible and the opinion is to accept. Notwithstanding I propose you to introduce both types of the Elk (of course this needs slightly different graphics to distinguish them): the B/W-Elk: it moves on the black squares as rook, but on the white squares it jumps like a knight (this is the actual used type); and the W/B-Elk: it moves on the white squares as rook, and on the black squares it leaps like a knight (I proposed this type for the white pieces). With this two types you may build easily different setups (symmetric or not, first move as knight or not). Did you consider to apply this new method (different move possibilities depending on the color of the square) to other combinations of pieces, e.g. Elk pawns: move (when not capturing) as pawn or as knight (forward only), capture always diagonal; a Rook/Nightrider piece (how to name it?) Alfred Pfeiffer Edit Form You may not post a new comment, because ItemID The Elk does not match any item.