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Influence Chess. Pieces on the top or bottom layer influence which chess pieces may move on the middle layer. (3x(4x7), Cells: 84) [All Comments] [Add Comment or Rating]
Jianying Ji wrote on Tue, Oct 1, 2002 02:49 PM UTC:Excellent ★★★★★
This been an idea I been thinking of for a while. It pleases me to no end
that someone has made a variant along these lines. It would be great to
see more variants using 'influencing' as an element in them.

LCC wrote on Tue, Oct 1, 2002 03:06 PM UTC:Good ★★★★
This is promising. I'll comment again after playtesting.

By the way, I'm assuming a pawn can't promote to a prince or commander,
right?

George Duke wrote on Thu, Feb 24, 2005 07:08 PM UTC:
'GHI,LargeCV': Good central idea bogs down in actualization. A square that a main Middle board piece sits on has corresponding square in Above and Below boards. These locations (departure square) 'influence' whether a move can be considered or not. To make the move, it also must be legal within the Middle board. Sometimes the Above or Below two piece-types move their one- or two-square way, and other times they duplicate a Middle board movement. Rules may very well be interpretable (including moving opponent's piece) in all cases. However, constant re-figuring of rules thwarts development of strategy. How about a simple 'influence' within just one board instead? For ex., Rook/Bishop/Knight based on black/white departure square, or else Berolina/Standard Pawn based on piece adjacent or not. Or an Eight-Stone Chess moving-blockade sort of influence?

Yu Ren Dong wrote on Tue, Oct 14, 2008 03:02 PM UTC:Excellent ★★★★★
I like this variant. I never dreamed of the desgin like it.

George Duke wrote on Sun, Mar 12, 2017 07:59 PM UTC:Excellent ★★★★★

 A square that a main Middle board piece sits on has corresponding square in Above and Below boards. These locations (departure square) 'influence' whether a move can be considered or not. To make the move, it also must be legal within the Middle board. Sometimes the Above or Below two piece-types move their one- or two-square way, and other times they duplicate a Middle board movement. Rules may very well be interpretable (including moving opponent's piece) in all cases.


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