Smess
Also known as All the King's Men and Take the Brain.
Produced by Parker Brothers in 1970, Smess was created by sit-com writer Perry Grant (1924-2004) and/or game developer Reuben Klamer (1922-2021). In The Encyclopedia of Chess Variants, David Pritchard cites only Perry Grant as the inventor, and Grant's obituary also mentions that he invented Smess. But the board says "© 1970 Reuben Klamer and Associates." It's probable that the original idea for it was Grant's, and Klamer, being a professional game developer, helped him finetune the game, design the game equipment, and get it produced by a major game company.
It was also published under the name Take the Brain, which was apparently the British name for it. Take the Brain was identical to Smess except for the name. In 1979, Parker Brothers released All the King's Men, which was mostly the same game as Smess but with a completely new look. While Smess and Take the Brain were both based on a motif of childishness and mild insanity, All the King's Men was based on a medieval motif. This was presumably an attempt to market Smess to people who had thought of it merely as a children's game. While I played Smess as a child and continued to think well of it as an adult, I can understand that some people may have dismissed the game as a children's game without ever playing it. It was, after all, presented as a dumbed-down version of Chess for children and morons. The name Smess was an irreverent parody of Chess, and its subtitle was The Ninny's Chess. Despite this, Smess proved to be a very good game for both children and adults, as well as ninnies and brains. And it should be understood that the name Smess and the presentation of the game were meant in fun, and taken in that spirit, they add to the enjoyment of the game. Smess did not take itself as seriously as All the King's Men later did, but this was part of the fun of playing Smess.
Board & Setup
This is the initial setup for Smess and Take the Brain. Close inspection reveals that the board for All the King's Men is slightly different. Where there are one-way hand-shaped arrows on the Smess board's b and f files, the board for All the King's Men has two-way arrows. You can see this by inspecting the photo of All the King's Men shown further below. Aside from this difference, the boards for Smess and All the King's Men have the same configuration of arrows.
Image created using Fergus Duniho's implementation
of Smess as a Zillions of Games rules file
Pieces
Ninny |
Moves one square in the direction indicated by the square it's on. |
Numskull |
Moves any number of squares in the direction indicated by the square it's on. May not jump other pieces. |
Brain |
Moves one square in the direction indicated by the square it's on. If captured, you lose! |
Rules
The object is to capture the Brain. Like Chess, this is a turn-based game in which you move one piece per turn on a checkered board. But unlike Chess, the Smess board has arrows on every space, and these arrows indicate which directions a piece may move. Ninnies and Brains each move one space in any direction indicated by one of the arrows on its space. Numskulls ride in a straight line in any direction indicated by one of the arrows on the space it begins its move from. When a Ninny reaches one of the spaces that a Numskull began on, it promotes to a Numskull. The rules are ambiguous on whether it must be a captured Numskull. The official rules say "It is removed from the board and replaced with a NUMSKULL which had previously been captured." But this may just be a line of instruction telling players what to do when a Ninny promotes to a Numskull. In the Zillions implementation by Fergus Duniho, the rule is interpreted without any restriction, allowing any Ninny to promote to a Numskull when it reaches a Numskull space. Although it's included in the official Smess rules, I have not found the promotion rule in the official rules for All the King's Men. So these two games may have slightly different rules.
- Official Smess Rules (PDF), provided by Hasbro
- Official Rules for All the King's Men (PDF), provided by Hasbro
Pictures
Here are some pictures of an actual Smess board. This board belongs to Fergus Duniho.
Smess board without pieces. Click on image to display larger version. |
Smess board with pieces. Click on image to display larger version. |
All The King's Men Set
Here is a photo of an All the Kings Men set:
All The King's Men Rules
Here is a photo copy of the rules for All the Kings Men:
Zillions of Games
Smess may be played with Zillions of Games.
Written by David Howe and Fergus Duniho. Smess board courtesy of Fergus Duniho. All the King's Men Set Photo and Rules courtesy of David Vander Ark. HaruN Y coded the Interactive Diagram, and Fergus Duniho created and provided the graphics it uses and touched it up with some hints from H. G. Muller, who is responsible for the JavaScript code behind Interactive Diagrams.
WWW page created: August 21, 1999. Last modified: May 11, 2024.