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Aurelian Florea wrote on Fri, Oct 26, 2018 08:12 AM UTC:

It has been pointed to me that the promotion rules make for the possibility of not having the needed physical material for when playing on physical boards :)!

My stance on that was always that today chess is most of the time played over the internet where physical material it is not a concern as with software you can always "cast" 10 queens :)!

Official competitions are held this way mostly for tradition and cheating protection reasons.

In 50 years physical boards will probably become fringe and understood only to the very curios as is for a modern audience medieval western European poetry, for example :)!

I never liked Christian Freeing's Grand Chess promotion rules. It just makes a good game worse. Fergus Duniho has done better in Gross Chess (the game in the I have in the meantime remember I got the idea of such complex rules) gives the extra possibility, with respect to Cristian Freeling's game, of promotion to more queens, rooks, bishops and knights probably under the pretext that such material is more easily obtainable casually and more cheaply in the market. That is a big help. I will make such rules myself but not because it makes the game better (it does not make it worse and after you read the rules you would see why this practically cannot happen) and I'm not worried about the material as my way still requires plenty of physical pieces, which will make individual boards cheaper, nor will help or hinder eventual clubs who should anyway need to have extra boards with extra pieces. But as a respect for the reach history of the art of chess boards and pieces I will insert the following restrictions:

A player can have at a time a maximum of:

4 rooks

3 queens, knights, champions, siege elephants,mamelukes, wizards and bishops

2 griffins,marshals,archbishops and aancas

and as stated in a previous comment 1 joker


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