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Multi-King Chess. Missing description (8x8, Cells: 64) [All Comments] [Add Comment or Rating]
Doug Chatham wrote on Thu, Dec 1, 2005 06:27 PM UTC:Good ★★★★
Slight typo in your description. 'Chekmate' should be 'checkmate'.

💡📝Roberto Lavieri wrote on Fri, Dec 2, 2005 03:13 PM UTC:
Thanks, Doug. Updated page, with an answer to your question about if a King can move to a square in which it is in Check. I think yes.

David Paulowich wrote on Fri, Dec 2, 2005 10:39 PM UTC:
I would recommend something similar to the SHOGI promotion rules. [1A] is your original promotion rule (mandatory for pawns). [1B] 'A promotion may be deferred to a later move, as long as this move begins inside the promotion zone. Where the move ends is of no relevance.'

According to my limited knowledge of SHOGI, a Bishop in the promotion zone will first move like a Bishop and then have the option of promoting to a Dragon Horse. This sort of promotion can make Multi-King Chess more exciting.


David Paulowich wrote on Fri, Dec 2, 2005 10:52 PM UTC:
To clarify my previous comment on deferred promotions - I did not mean to suggest promotion to anything other than a new King.

And your rule [3] means that a lone 'stalemated' King must move into check and therefore lose. That simplifies the ending K + P versus K considerably.


💡📝Roberto Lavieri wrote on Fri, Dec 2, 2005 11:49 PM UTC:
Thank you, David. Yes, the mentioned Shogi rule for promotions would be interesting, in the sense it can allow a player put a promoted piece (to King) in a safe or an offensive square, depending on the circumstances. I´m convinced that yours is a rule in perfect harmony with the spirit of the game and it is an improvement, so I´ll adopt it. Credit is yours.

💡📝Roberto Lavieri wrote on Sat, Dec 3, 2005 12:03 AM UTC:
Updated

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