Check out Balbo's Chess, our featured variant for October, 2024.

This page is written by the game's inventor, Steve Kirby.

HexChess-Kirby's

HexChess (Kirby's).

THE BOARD:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BfpV2uyXj_Q

313 spaces, (144 squares, 42 pents, 127 Hexes). A central field of Hexes, 8 x 8 x 8, with the outer ring of Hexes trimmed to match up to three ranks of a regular Chess Board, forming a ring of irregular pentagons, with the Rooks fourth ranks shared by adjacent side boards. The unique feature of this board over other hexagonal chess boards is that the Sideboards, and the 'border crossing' fourth rank pent ring provide a relatively safe home base, from which to launch play onto the Hex field.

Unlike Glinski's, or McCooey's, set up is along the sides of the Hexagonal Field, and set back from the Field, rather than across the corners of the Hexagonal Field.

.

NOTATION

The Hex Field is notated in the following manner:

----------------------[ Q8 ][ Q10 ][ Q12 ][Q14 ][ Q16 ][ Q18 ][Q20 ][Q22 ]

--------------------[ P7 ][ P9 ][ P11 ][ P13 ][ P15 ][ P17 ][ P19 ][ P21 ][ P23 ]

----------------[ N6 ][ N8 ][ N10][ N12 ][ N14 ][ N16 ][ N18 ][ N20 ][ N22 ][ N24 ]

-------------[ M5 ][ M7 ][ M9 ][M11 ][ M13 ][M15 ][ M17 ][M19 ][ M21 ][M23 ][ M25 ]

----------[ L4 ][ L6 ][ L8 ][ L10][ L12 ]-[ L14 ][ L16 ]-[ L18 ][ L20 ]-[ L22 ][ L24 ]-[ L26 ]

------[ K3 ][ K5 ][ K7 ][ K9 ][ K11 ][ K13 ][ K15 ][ K17 ][ K19 ][ K21 ][ K23 ][ K25 ][ K27 ]

---[ J2 ]-[ J4 ]-[ J6 ]-[ J8 ][ J10][ J12 ]-[ J14 ]-[ J16 ]-[ J18 ]-[ J20 ][ J22 ][ J24 ][ J26 ]-[ J28 ]

[ H1 ][ H3 ][ H5 ][ H7 ][ H9 ][ H11 ][ H13 ][ H15 ][ H17 ][H19][ H21 ][ H23 ][ H25 ][ H27 ][ H29 ]

---[ G2 ][ G4 ][ G6 ][ G8 ][ G10][ G12 ][ G14 ][ G16 ][ G18 ][ G20 ][ G22 ][ G24 ][ G26 ][ G28 ]

------[ F3 ]-[ F5 ]-[ F7 ][ F9 ]-[ F11 ][ F13 ]-[ F15 ][ F17 ]-[ F19 ][ F21 ]-[ F23 ][ F25 ]-[ F27 ]

----------[ E4 ][ E6 ]-[ E8 ]-[ E10][ E12 ]-[ E14 ][ E16 ][ E18 ]-[ E20 ][ E22 ]-[ E24 ]-[ E26 ]

-------------[ D5 ][ D7 ][ D9 ][ D11 ][ D13 ]-[ D15 ][ D17 ][ D19 ][ D21 ][ D23 ]-[ D25 ]

----------------[ C6 ]-[ C8 ]-[ C10][ C12 ]-[ C14 ][ C16 ][ C18 ]-[ C20 ][ C22 ]-[ C24 ]

--------------------[ B7 ][ B9 ]-[ B11 ][ B13 ]-[ B15 ][ B17 ]-[ B19 ][ B21 ]-[ B23 ]

----------------------[ A8 ]-[ A10 ][ A12 ]-[ A14 ][ A16 ]-[ A18 ][ A20 ]-[ A22 ]

Each of the SideBoards is notated in the following form,(with the "*" being replaced on each SideBoard with a Letter denoting the color of the army on that side.)

----------------------[*/31 ][*/32][*/33 ]-[*/34]-[*/35]-[*/36][*/37]-[*/38]

----------------------[*/21 ][*/22][*/23 ]-[*/24]-[*/25]-[*/26][*/27]-[*/28]

----------------------[*/11 ][*/12][*/13 ]-[*/14]-[*/15]-[*/16][*/17]-[*/18]

One SideBoard each is attached along the lines

from A8 to A22,

from A22 to H29,

fromH29 to Q22,

from Q22 to Q8,

from Q8 to H1,

and

from H1 to A8.)

The ring of Pents of from A8 to A22 to H29 to Q22 to Q8 to H1 and back to A8 form the Pent Ring, and are the border check points for all but the Knights.

Setup

THE SETUP:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hxohkt9y_9g

My HexChess board was conceived by, and created by myself, in 1987, when the need arose for a board that would seat more than four chess players. I had previously designed and assembled a four player board, which I later discovered was already on the market. I designed my Hex board before learning of Glinski's.

My board seats up to six players, each with his or her own full chess army. I chose six different colored armies from an internet supplier. Since my HexChess game can be played as

THREE, FOUR, or SIX PLAYER cut throat,

FOUR-PLAYER-TWO-TEAM,

SIX-PLAYER-THREE-TEAM, (I believe, the best) or

SIX-PLAYER-TWO-TEAM,

I chose color groupings of light/dark pairs for two player teams (Red/Pink, Black/White, and Gold/Silver). these can also be grouped for three player teams (Dark--Black/Red/Silver, White/Pink, Gold)

The setup is the same as in FIDE Chess on each sideboard, with the exception that the Queen is set up to the same side (right of the King, or left of the King) on all sideboards. The choice is up to the player who wins the draw for first play.

A note about the ring of Pents (fourth rank.) No piece, other than the Knight, can travel from the sideboard squares (ranks 1-3) to, or from, the Hexes (ranks 5 outward) without stoping on a Pent (fourth rank), and waiting for a later turn. Thus, unlike Glinski's, McCooey's, Shafran's, and other all-hexagon Chess boards, the Pent Ring forms a border stop that protects each Sideboard from cross-board swooping invasion. The fourth rank (Pents) are at the same time, square (to the side and back,) and Hexagonal (to the sides and outward.)

Team mates and Alliances:

Three, Four, and Six Player Cut Throat. Aliances exist, but not teams.

Four-Player-Two-Team: Teams are the crossboard players, (Red/Pink, Gold/Silver, or Black/white, with one of the pairings being removed. Alliances don't exist in this configuration.

Six-Player-Three-Team: Teams are crossboard, as in the above example. Aliances exist in this configuration.

Six_Player_Two_Team: Teams are Dark-(Black/Silver/Red), and Light-(White/Gold/Pink). Alliances don't exist in this configuration.

Team mates cannot capture or be a threat to each other.

Alliances mean that any combination of two or more teams armies' attacking pieces or pawns combine to threaten Check. ('Check' is called, even if it looks like 'Checkmate' if at least one other player has a move before the checked king is to respond. (things may change before the response.) More on this later

Pieces

Each player starts with one Queen, one King, two Bishops, two Knights, two Rooks, and eight Pawns. One Amazon Queen may be added upon Pawn promotion, under certain conditions.

Rules

THE MOVES:

PAWNS:

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

-------------[ D5 ][ D7 ][ D9 ][ D11 ][ D13 ]-[ D15 ][ D17 ][ D19 ][ D21 ][ D23 ]-[ D25 ]

----------------[ C6 ]-[ C8 ]-[ C10][ C12 ]-[ C14 ][ TAKE][ C18 ]-[ C20 ][ C22 ]-[ C24 ]

--------------------[ B7 ][ B9 ]-[ B11 ][TAKE]-[Move ][Move]-[TAKE][ B21 ]-[ B23 ]

----------------------[ A8 ]-[ A10 ][ A12 ]-[ A14 ][Pawn ]-[ A18 ][ A20 ]-[ A22 ]

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5d1cgj2nZFM

Within ranks 1-4, all Pawn moves conform to FIDE rules.

0:01 From rank 4 outward, Pawns (the black Pawn in this example from the video) move across the Hex side,

forward left (60 deg.left),(A16 to B15), or

forward right (60 deg.right), (A16 to B17),

(see Quarters in video) ,

and capture across the Hex corner

forward left (30 deg.left), (A16 to B13),

forward (0 deg.)(A16 to C16)(yes, that's a diagonal move),

or forward right (30 deg.right), (A16 to B19)

0:10 Pawns promote when they are half way across the middle from their starting Sideboard. (the row of Hexes parallel to the players first rank, and containing the 'Center' Hex (H15))

In the video, notice the gold Pawns and the silver Pawns have reached the middle rank from their home squares. The pink Pawns and red Pawns have also made it to the middle rank from their home squares, though the middle rank is on another angle. Likewise for the white Pawns and black Pawns.

Pawns can only promote to reclaim a lost piece, or, if promoted while no First rank piece of that army is missing, the Pawn can promote to an Amazon Queen (Combined Queen-Knight.)

KNIGHTS

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

[ H1 ][ H3 ][ H5 ][ H7 ][ H9 ][ H11 ][ H13 ][ H15 ][ H17 ][H19][ H21 ][ H23 ][ H25 ][ H27 ][ H29 ]

---[ G2 ][ G4 ][ G6 ][ G8 ][ G10][ G12 ][ G14 ][ Move][ Move][ G20 ][ G22 ][ G24 ][ G26 ][ G28 ]

------[ F3 ]-[ F5 ]-[ F7 ][ F9 ]-[ F11 ][ Move]-[ F15 ][ F17 ]-[ F19 ][ Move]-[ F23 ][ F25 ]-[ F27 ]

----------[ E4 ][ E6 ]-[ E8 ]-[ E10][ Move]-[ E14 ][ E16 ][ E18 ]-[ E20 ][ Move]-[ E24 ]-[ E26 ]

-------------[ D5 ][ D7 ][ D9 ][ D11 ][ D13 ]-[ D15 ][Knght][ D19 ][ D21 ][ D23 ]-[ D25 ]

----------------[ C6 ]-[ C8 ]-[ C10][ Move]-[ C14 ][ C16 ][ C18 ]-[ C20 ][ Move]-[ C24 ]

--------------------[ B7 ][ B9 ]-[ B11 ][ Move]-[ B15 ][ B17 ]-[ B19 ][ Move]-[ B23 ]

----------------------[ A8 ]-[ A10 ][ A12 ]-[ A14 ][ Move]-[ Move][ A20 ]-[ A22 ]

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=81YDxG2QIvY

Knights moving within the first four ranks follow the same rules as do those in FIDE Chess.

Hexagonal Moves:

0:01 Knights move either one and two, or two and one, with the bend being 60 degrees, rather than 90 degrees. The red Pawns represent two, then one right, the black Pawns represent two, then one left.

0:05 The silver Knight ilustrates the forward moves from the 2nd rank. The silver Pawns show the possible forward moves to rank 3, and rank 4. The white Pawns show the possible moves across the Pent Ring to rank 5.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

[ H1 ][ H3 ][ H5 ][ H7 ][ H9 ][ H11 ][ H13 ][ H15 ][ H17 ][H19][ H21 ][ H23 ][ H25 ][ H27 ][ H29 ]

---[ G2 ][ G4 ][ G6 ][ G8 ][ G10][ G12 ][ G14 ][ G16 ][ G18 ][ G20 ][ G22 ][ G24 ][ G26 ][ G28 ]

------[ F3 ]-[ F5 ]-[ F7 ][ F9 ]-[ F11 ][ F13 ]-[ F15 ][ F17 ]-[ F19 ][ F21 ]-[ F23 ][ F25 ]-[ F27 ]

----------[ E4 ][ E6 ]-[ E8 ]-[ E10][ E12 ]-[ E14 ][ E16 ][ E18 ]-[ E20 ][ E22 ]-[ E24 ]-[ E26 ]

-------------[ D5 ][ D7 ][ D9 ][ D11 ][ D13 ]-[ D15 ][ D17 ][ D19 ][ D21 ][ D23 ]-[ D25 ]

----------------[ C6 ]-[ C8 ]-[ C10][ C12 ]-[ C14 ][ C16 ][ C18 ]-[ C20 ][ C22 ]-[ C24 ]

--------------------[ B7 ][ B9 ]-[ B11 ][ Move]-[ Move][ B17 ]-[ B19 ][ B21 ]-[ B23 ]

-----------------------[A8 ]-[A10][ Move]-[ A14 ][ Move]-[ A18 ][ A20 ]-[ A22 ]

-----------------------[ *31][Move][ *33 ]--[ *34 ]-[ *35 ][ Move]-[ *37 ]-[ *38 ]

-----------------------[ *21 ][ *22 ][ *23 ]--[Knght]-[ *25 ][ *26 ]--[ *27 ]--[ *28 ]

-----------------------[ *11][Move][ *13 ]--[ *14 ]-[ *15 ][ Move]--[ *17 ]--[ *18 ]

0:16 Here we have a red Knight moving from rank 6 into rank5 and 4 and (across the Pent Ring) to rank 3. (white Pawns.)

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

------[ F3 ]-[ F5 ]-[ F7 ][ F9 ]-[ F11 ][ Move]-[ Move][ F17 ]-[ F19 ][ F21 ]-[ F23 ][ F25 ]-[ F27 ]

----------[ E4 ][ E6 ]-[ E8 ]-[Move][ E12 ]-[ E14 ][ E16 ][ Move]-[ E20 ][ E22 ]-[ E24 ]-[ E26 ]

-------------[ D5 ][ D7 ][Move][ D11 ][ D13 ]-[ D15 ][ D17 ][ Move][ D21 ][ D23 ]-[ D25 ]

----------------[ C6 ]-[ C8 ]-[ C10][ C12 ]-[Knight][ C16 ][ C18 ]-[ C20 ][ C22 ]-[ C24 ]

--------------------[ B7 ][Move]-[ B11 ][ B13 ]-[ B15 ][ B17 ]-[ Move][ B21 ]-[ B23 ]

----------------------[ A8 ]-[ Move][ A12 ]-[ A14 ][ A16 ]-[ Move][ A20 ]-[ A22 ]

----------------------[ *31 ][ *32 ]-[ Move]--[ *34 ]-[ Move][ *36 ]--[ *37 ]--[ *38 ]

----------------------[ *21 ][ *22 ]-[ *23 ]--[ *24 ]-[ *25 ][ *26 ]--[ *27 ]--[ *28 ]

----------------------[ *11 ][ *12]-[ *13 ]--[ *14 ]-[ *15 ][ *16 ]--[ *17 ]--[ *18 ]

0:22 The silver Knight is moving from rank 5 into rank 4, and (across the Pent Ring) rank 2. (gold Pawns).

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

----------[ E4 ][ E6 ]-[ E8 ]-[ E10][ Move]-[ Move][ E16 ][ E18 ]-[ E20 ][ E22 ]-[ E24 ]-[ E26 ]

-------------[ D5 ][ D7 ][Move][ D11 ][ D13 ]-[ D15 ][ Move][ D19 ][ D21 ][ D23 ]-[ D25 ]

----------------[ C6 ]-[Move]-[ C10][ C12 ]-[ C14 ][ C16 ][ Move]-[ C20 ][ C22 ]-[ C24 ]

--------------------[ B7 ]-[ B9 ]-[ B11 ]-[Knght]-[ B15 ][ B17 ]-[ B19 ]-[ B21 ]-[ B23 ]

----------------------[ Move ]-[ A10 ][ A12 ]-[ A14 ][ A16 ]-[ Move][ A20 ]-[ A22 ]

----------------------[ *31 ]-[ *32 ]-[ *33 ]--[ *34 ]-[ *35 ]--[ *36]---[ *37 ]--[ *38 ]

----------------------[ *21 ]-[ *22 ]-[Move][ Move][ *25 ]--[ *26]---[ *27 ]--[ *28 ]

----------------------[ *11 ]-[ *12 ]-[ *13 ]--[ *14 ]-[ *15 ]--[ *16 ]--[ *17 ]--[ *18 ]

Knights are the only pieces that can cross the Pents in one move.

BISHOPS:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nFv__pIaOOQ

Within ranks 1-4, all Bishop moves are identical with those in FIDE Chess.

From rank 4 outward, Bishops move across Hex corners (see quarters) Notice in some directions, the Bishop shown cannot reach rank 4 (towards the Black or White SideBoard), but only Rank 5. Notice also, that with three colors in the Hex Field, and only two Bishops per army, it is not possible for one army to cover all three colors at any one time. It is possible, however, to move the red Bishop shown to , say, gold Queen's Bishop 4, then to gold Queen 3, and out again to gold King 4 (blue Pent), thus changing the color, or from gold Queen's Bishop 4 to gold Queen's Knight 3, and then out to gold Queen's Rook 4 (white Pent) changing that Bishop to the white Hexes.

Bishops within ranks 1-3 cannot move further out than rank 4, before awaiting another turn, and Bishops on the Hex Field (rank 5 and out) cannot move further in than Rank 4 before waiting another turn.

ROOKS:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eYRFo3DJOAg

Within the first four ranks, the moves are identical to those in FIDE Chess.

From rank 4 outward, Rooks move across Hex sides (see quarters). Rooks cannot pass from ranks 1 through 3 to ranks 5 and higher, or from ranks 5 and higher to ranks 1 through 3, without stoping on rank 4, and waiting at least until that player's next turn.

QUEENS: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xv03StHpGoA

Queens follow FIDE rules within ranks 1-4.

On the Hex field, (rank 4 outward) Queens combine Rook moves (see quarters) with Bishop moves (see Pawns--I ran out of quarters).

KINGS: Moves, Checkmate, and Stalemate Rules

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z7H3i2CivcM

Within ranks 1-4, Kings move as in FIDE Chess.

On the Hex field (ranks 4 outward) Kings move as the Bishop moves , one space (see black Pawns), or as the Rook moves, one space (see gold Pawns).

You may notice it is half as many Bishop style single space moves from one side of the Hex Field to the other, as it is in Rook style single space moves.

For this reason, a King flushed out of his Sideboard, might be in better shape than one stuck in the first four ranks.

Check and Checkmate: Kings may be checked by one army's pieces, or by a combination of pieces from several hostile armies.

When a King is placed in Check, 'Check' is called.

When a King is placed in what appears to be Checkmate, 'Check ' is called, until it is that King's turn to attempt escape, and if the Checkmate still exists, then 'Checkmate' can be called.

When a King is indeed in 'Checkmate', on his turn, the player removes the King, and leaves his other pieces and Pawns on the board as dead soldiers, where they have no moves, and can't be a threat, but can be hidden behind, or taken, by the remaining players.

The Checkmate of one teammate's King does not knock the other teammate(s) out of the game.

Stalemate Resolution:

When a Stalemate is found, or caused, the player with the stalemated King may lift him out of Stalemate, move him to any space, and reclaim a lost piece which is placed in the original position of the King when he was in Stalemate.

Play continues.

If that player still had all his Bishops, Rooks, Knights, and Queen in play at the time of the Stalemate, he may move the King as before, and replace him with an Amazon Queen.

Play continues.

The last team with a King on the board wins.

AMAZON QUEENS:

Amazon Queens can move as a Queen, or as a Knight.

One Amazon Queen may be obtained upon the reaching of the Pawn Promotion line by a Pawn of an army which has, at the time of promotion, all of it's Rooks, Bishops Knights, and it's Queen still on the board.

Pawns reaching the promotion line with an Amazon Queen, and all of it's Bishops, Rooks, Knights, and Queen still in play, continues as a Pawn until that player looses a power piece, whereupon the lost piece replaces the waiting Pawn.



This 'user submitted' page is a collaboration between the posting user and the Chess Variant Pages. Registered contributors to the Chess Variant Pages have the ability to post their own works, subject to review and editing by the Chess Variant Pages Editorial Staff.


By Steve Kirby.
Web page created: 2012-01-04. Web page last updated: 2012-01-04