Enter Your Reply The Comment You're Replying To George Duke wrote on Fri, Feb 26, 2010 05:46 PM UTC:This recapitulation is by way of critique of the status quo. These Next Chesses started in 2008 under inspiration of profound CV-thinker Editor Joyce and also method of International Abstract Games Organization classes. 24 are so far ranked, of which the crux are the upper 50% or 33% at at any given time, which bore and passed scrutiny. Nothing prevents its growing to 50 or 100 -- or 500, with diminished marginal utility -- and fluidity will permit extensive migration up and down according to future play and choices. At this point, even one opinion by anybody expressed would change one or many rank positions. Self-nomination is encouraged, as Aronson just did with Not Particularly New. Put your money where your mouth is, not burrowed into unnoticed artwork. One conclusion: increasing preference for 8x10 as superior to minimal 64 squares. Exceptions: well-tailored Three Player (rank #4) or upcoming N.P.New rather on 9x8. Another heuristic: Track One and Track Two are useful, inasmuch as Track Two is further removed from Shatranj and strong Queen Shatranj, still played mechanically today by the great unwashed multitude. Many will always prefer Track Two, the way there is always an avant garde. Yet Chess is arguably the artifact across cultures most unchanged since the first millennium, so there is potentially religious as well as scientific importance in the Project. Any website freely avails all rankings I and II but permission of authors recommended for implementation of play. It is better for something to happen than for nothing to happen. Nothing happens but self-indulgence when repeat designers do more post-your-own art, Gary Kasparov's ''nonsense.'' Over-proliferation, with great similarity to past designs and small re-arrangement, has made discovery of prior art more taxing. So more and more critics will be needed to prioritize and counter the now recurring remark: ''I don't know whether this is a new idea, but here we go again...'' Ye Gods. When every dog will have had his day, the Chickens will come home to roost, and the Worm will turn. Rest ye on it. Edit Form You may not post a new comment, because ItemID NextChess8 does not match any item.