Cheshire Cat Chess Cheshire Cat Chess is a chess variant created by Vernon Rylands Parton in 1970. The game is played with standard Chess rules but there are two important changes: 1) When a pieces moves to another square, the former square disappears and no piece can move to it (but pieces can move or give a check over disappeared squares). 2) When a king moves for the first time, it can move as a queen (it also means that there is no castling in this game). (阅读规则)
Knightmate Chess This chess game, created by Bruce Zimov in 1972, introduces an interesting goal - to checkmate a knight instead of a king. It means that each player has one knight (at the standard king position) and two kings (at the standard knight positions). A castling move can be done with the knight and a rook, and a pawn can promote to a king. (阅读规则)
Racing Kings This is a very popular and original Chess variant, invented by Vernon R. Parton in 1961. The game is played with no pawns, all pieces are positioned at the first two rows and the goal is not to checkmate the enemy king, but to be the first one who moves owns king to the last row. (阅读规则)
Dice Chess 10x10 This game is a variant of Dice Chess. It follows the same rules but it is played on a bigger board (10x10 squares) and each player starts with 3 kings instead of 1. The player, who captures all opponent's kings, wins the game. (阅读规则)
Massacre Chess Massacre Chess (by Andy Lewicki) is a new chess variant of the random initial position category. Each player starts with 8 queens, 8 rooks, 8 bishops and 8 knights (so there are no empty squares) and players are obliged to capture an opponent's piece in every move. The player who cannot make a legal move or loses all pieces, loses the game. (阅读规则)