Grasshopper chess
The Grasshopper is a piece that is popular with inventors of fairy chess problems. It was invented in 1912 by the well-known fairy chess problem composer T. R. Dawson. The piece was inspired by the cannon from Chinese Chess. In the 1950s, J. Boyer from France, who invented many chess variants, invented Grasshopper Chess.
Setup
The game is played on a normal 8x8 chess board. In addition to the usual pieces, the players each have eight Grasshoppers positioned on the second and seventh ranks. The Pawns are placed on the third and sixth as shown below.
White:
King e1; Queen d1; Rook a1, h1; Knight b1, g1; Bishop c1, f1; Grasshopper
a2, b2, c2, d2, e2, f2, g2, h2; Pawn a3, b3, c3, d3, e3, f3, g3, h3.
Black:
King e8; Queen d8; Rook a8, h8; Knight b8, g8; Bishop c8, f8; Grasshopper
a7, b7, c7, d7, e7, f7, g7, h7;
Pawn a6, b6, c6, d6, e6, f6, g6, h6.
Initial Setup:
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Rules
Grasshoppers move as a chess Queen, but must jump exactly one piece (of either color) when it moves, and it stops at the square immediately after the piece it jumped. For example, the following moves are legal from the opening setup:
1. G h2-h4, G c7-a5. 2. G h4 x e7
Note that Grasshoppers capture by landing on a square occupied by a hostile piece. The pieces jumped over are not captured. (In the example above, white's second move captures the Grasshopper on e7, but does not capture the Pawn on f6.)
Pawns move as they do in Chess, but without the initial double step. Pawns can promote to Queen, Rook, Bishop, Knight, or Grasshopper.
All other pieces and rules are the same as in orthodox Chess.
Equipment
This game can be played with a conventional Chess set plus checkers to represent the Grasshoppers.
Sources
The game was described in R. Wayne Schmittberger's New Rules for Classic Games and in Pritchard's The Encyclopedia of Chess Variants.
Written by: Hans Bodlaender.
Updated by: Greg Strong.
WWW page created: 1995-11-15.
WWW page updated: 2021-05-15.