Check out Janggi (Korean Chess), our featured variant for November, 2024.

This game is a favorite of its inventor.

Shako

The word shako means “chess” in Esperanto, which is another kind of non-conformism and utopia.

The driving idea behind the invention of this chess variant was to create a new game without disposing the large heritage of the classical game. All rules of orthodox chess are kept in Shako, and the way the pieces are set up in the opening array allows the players to practically mimic all the openings used for usual chess. Indeed, this variant presents a very short learning curve for the experienced chess player.

There are two new and additional types of pieces. One is the Cannon, borrowed from xiangqi (Chinese chess), with the intention to bring back together the two branches of the game that went of from the Silk Road, one to Chinese empire in the east, the other one to the Persians and the Arabs in the west. The second new piece, an Elephant, is inspired by shatranj and medieval chess in order to bridge with a prestigious past.

The design of Shako was completed in 1990. Shako has an entry in D.B.Pritchard's The Classified Encyclopedia of Chess Variants (2007). It is also described in:

Shako can be played on PyChess website, on Jocly, with Zillions-of-Games, on Musketeerchess.net, on Chess V and on AI AI platforms. It has an entry on Board Games Geek.

You can also play Shako with Game Courier here!

Setup

The board is the decimal board with 10 x 10 squares.

There are 44 pieces of 8 different types, 22 for each player:

1 King, 1 Queen, 2 Bishops, 2 Knights, 2 Rooks, 2 Cannons, 2 Elephants, and 10 Pawns.

Initial setup for Shako

White:
King f2; Queen e2; Rook b2, i2; Knight c2, h2; Bishop d2, g2; Elephant a2, j2; Cannon a1, j1, Pawn a3, b3, c3, d3, e3, f3, g3, h3, i3, j3, k3, l3.

Black:
King f9; Queen e9; Rook b9, i9; Knight c9, h9; Bishop d9, g9; Elephant a9, j9; Cannon a10, j10; Pawn a8, b8, c8, d8, e8, f8, g8, h8, i8, j8, k8, l8.

 

This is the original diagram made by Hans Bodlaender in the 1990s.

Pieces

King: moves 1 step in every (8) directions on a not attacked square. The King is in check if it is attacked by one or several enemy pieces. It is forbidden to play a move letting his King in check.

Castling remains a simultaneous move of the player's King and one Rook, with the same conditions than at orthodox chess.

Move of King

Queen: slides to any square along the file, the rank or a diagonal on which it stands. Identical to standard chess.

Move of Queen

Rook: moves to any square along the file or the rank on which it stands. Identical to standard chess

Move of Rook

Bishop: slides to any square along a diagonal on which it stands. Identical to standard chess

Move of Bishop

Knight: a (2,1) jumper, it jumps to the opposite square of a 2x3 rectangle. No matter what the intermediate square contains. Identical to standard chess

Move of Knight

Pawn: it can move straight forward one, or two square from its starting position on the board, without capturing. It captures one square diagonally forward.  Identical to standard chess and Shako.

Move of Pawn

Cannon: exactly as in Xiangqi. The Cannon moves without taking like a Rook, but it takes by going in a straight horizontal and vertical line and jumping over exactly one piece. When a Cannon takes a piece, there must be exactly one piece between the original and final square of the Cannon's move - this piece may be of either color. This is identical to the move of the Cannon in Metamachy.

Move of Cannon

Elephant: it moves one or two squares diagonally. When an Elephant moves two squares, no matter what intermediate squares contain. Note that it always stays on the same color of square. The Elephant moves as the combined Alfil and Ferz from Shatranj, two pieces which were also present in mediaeval Chess and have disappeared with the birth of modern moves for the Bishop and the Queen. Exactly as in Metamachy.

Move of Elephant

Rules

The end-of-game rules, checkmate, stalemate, etc., are identical to standard chess.

Notes

Shako belongs to a sub-category of Decimal Chess which is very popular. Such a board is easily available from International Draughts. The strongest points are:

  1. Respect of the internal arrangement of the orthodox pieces which makes it familiar for the new player. Main FIDE chess principles are therefore still valid. Even some opening principle are transposable from chess to Shako.
  2. Introduction of two new pieces, one orthogonal, one diagonal which is a balanced choice. The orthogonal is the well known xiangqi Cannon while the diagonal is a "modernization" of the old Alfil.

Shako was a submission in the contest to design a large chess variant. Here you see a photo of Jean-Louis Cazaux set of Shako. The photo has been made by Jean-Luc Muraro. If you click on the photo, you see it in larger size.


The earliest page on Shako had been written by Hans Bodlaender in the 1990s. This page has been refreshed in 2022 by the author, Jean-Louis Cazaux. In memoriam for my best friend Jean-Luc Muraro (1967-2020).


On step beyond: For a game with more pieces filling the empty squares, try Pemba!


Deep thanks to H.G. Muller for making the Interactive Diagram below



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.


Author: Jean-Louis Cazaux and Hans L. Bodlaender. Inventor: Jean-Louis Cazaux.

Last revised by Jean-Louis Cazaux.


Web page created: 1997-10-21. Web page last updated: 2022-11-30