Charismatic Chess
Being charismatic is the opposite of being boring or dull. So yes, in this sense we have a very dynamic and energetic chess variant. Therefore, in order not to be boring, I will immediately move on to the description of the rules of Charismatic Chess, which were developed by me in the summer of 2023. Charismatic Chess completely follows the rules of classical chess with the exception of the starting setup, the introduction of pieces into the game and the number of possible moves that a player can make in his turn.Setup
Each player starts the game with only a king on the board. The starting setup in Charismatic Chess is shown below:Pieces
Each player has 15 chess pieces of his color in his reserve - 8 pawns, a queen, two rooks, two bishops and two knights.Rules
The placement stage Before making a move on the board, players take turns, starting with the white player, placing five random pieces from their reserve on their half of the board until this reserve is empty, that is, all the players’ pieces are on the board. The sequence of receiving from the reserve and placing pieces is simple: first, White receives five random pieces from his reserve and places them on the board. Then the same procedure is repeated by Black and so on. It is easy to calculate that to place all of their pieces on the board, each player will need only three turns. In the process of placing pieces on the board, it is not allowed to declare check to the opponent's king. Pawns may not be placed on the first row. Bishops can be placed on any square of your half of the board. Thus, two of a player's bishops can be on a square of the same color. Getting five random pieces at the placement stage can be achieved in various ways, which can only be limited by your imagination. Movement Once all of both players' pieces have been placed on the board, White moves first. Now the game completely follows the rules of Chess except for castling (see below) and the number of possible movements of chess pieces in a given turn (see below). On his turn, a player can make from one to five moves with his pieces (castling counts as one move). Any of these moves can be either a simple move of a piece on the board or a capture. The same piece can be moved only once in such a series (which also applies to the pieces involved in castling). Since the starting position of kings is different from standard chess, the concept of kingside and queenside for players will be different. This affects 0-0 and 0-0-0 for black. 0-0 for him will be achieved by moving the king to b8, and 0-0-0 to f8. Capturing en passant is permitted only on the turn immediately after the two-square advance, as in standard chess. Unlike Progressive Chess, a check to the opponent's king does not interrupt the series of moves, so in his turn, a player can declare check with several of his pieces at once. The object of the game is to checkmate the opponent; this occurs when the opponent's king is in check, and there is no legal way to get it out of check. In other words, the player loses the game if, in his turn (when he can make from one to five moves with his pieces), he cannot get rid of the check to his king. During his turn, when a player can play with one, two, three, four or five of his pieces, he is allowed to put his king in check. The main thing is that after his turn, the king of such a player no longer remains in check. Otherwise, such a player immediately loses.Notes
Thus, playing according to these rules, which include some elements of Unachess, Kingchess, and Progressive Chess, I managed to achieve a super-dynamic chess variant, whose combinatorial complexity does not leave a single chance for the AI. Which means only one thing - machines will never dominate humans in such games, as they now do in standard chess.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 Вадря Покштя.
Last revised by Вадря Покштя.
Web page created: 2023-09-18. Web page last updated: 2024-01-08