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

This page is written by the game's inventor, William Wragg. This game is a favorite of its inventor.

Mischia

This is just chess but on a 6x6 board, about half the size (by area) of a normal 8x8 chess board, which produces a style of game akin to a close complex midgame in normal chess, hence the name Mischia (Italian for Mêlée).

Setup

diagram

Pieces

White:

Black:

Rules

The starting position and board orientation is as illustrated. All rules are as in chess except:

The board is positioned so that the bottom right corner is a black square. The queen is on it's own colour square, the rook is on it's own colour corner square, while the knight is on it's opposite colour corner square, and the bishops are in their usual place alongside the king and queen. This setup is designed to give the same feel as normal chess, and better balance the power of the pieces to the board size.

The pawns can only move one place forward each turn, rather than being able to move two on their first move. This also means there is no en passant capture. Additionally there is only one knight and one rook a side, and castling is only on the queen's side, as that is where the only rook is. Although the castling is only on the queen's side, it behaves like a king side castle in a normal chess game, i.e. leaves the king one space from the corner, so the notation used to indicate a castle is the normal chess king side castle notation i.e. 0-0.

Pawn promotion is allowed in the same way as normal chess, except that the only choices for the replacement piece come from the already taken pieces (Rook, Bishop, Knight, Queen) of the same colour, and if pieces are available one of them must be chosen i.e. promotion is obligatory if a promotion piece is available, and a pawn must be promoted immediately. In the case where no pieces are available, the pawn will not be promoted, and will no longer be able to be moved by the player who's pawn it is, though it can still be taken as normal by the opponent.

Notes

I created a simple interactive diagram for Mischia using the Play-test applet for chess variants. A few things to note, are that the human player must manually adhere to the check rules, though the applet doesn't mark them in the notation. The applet also uses the normal queen side castling notation rather than the king side castling notation it should use. Despite this, it should give a flavour of the game, and is generally playable as long as the human player manually adheres to the check rules:

files=6 ranks=6 promoZone=1 promoChoice=*Q*R*N*B holdingsType=1 graphicsDir=https://www.chessvariants.com/graphics.dir/alfaeriePNG/ squareSize=50 lightShade=#E0E0E0 darkShade=#FFFFFF graphicsType=png royal=W,E shatranj pawn:P:fmWfcF:pawn:a2,b2,c2,d2,e2,f2,,a5,b5,c5,d5,e5,f5 knight:N:N:knight:f1,,f6 bishop:B:B:bishop:b1,e1,,b6,e6 rook:R:R:rook:a1,,a6 queen:Q:Q:queen:c1,,c6 King East Castle:E:KirO2:king:,,d6 King West Castle:W:KilO2:king:d1 firstRank=1 rimColor=#C1C1C1 enforceRules=1


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 William Wragg.

Last revised by William Wragg.


Web page created: 2024-07-08. Web page last updated: 2024-07-08