Discuss about interesting chess variants that are not implemented on BrainKing yet.
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Subject: Re: Still waiting to hear about Fischerandom chess in BrainKing...
Modified by SMIRF Engine (9. January 2005, 12:46:12)
to Fencer:
but not to forget: it must be possible to enter a king's move from and to his square, because there exist castlings, where the king's position keeps unchanged thought the castling is a king's move.
Tandem chess is good, as is Hostage Chess. The "Drop Chess" games make for strong initiatives, and the playing field is levelled a bit. Hostage keeps the forces more equal; Tandem Chess forces the opponent who makes mistakes to pay for them in pieces. Hostage Chess keeps all the pieces (possibly) able to be in play. Either would be good--both would be better!
Subject: Re: Castling in Fischerandom chess in BrainKing
Fencer: How about a King move to the square with the Rook you want to castle with? Since the King can't capture a rook of it's own color, this could be the signal a player wants to castle. If its legal for the King to castle with that particular rook, the engine should proceed and castle, otherwise an error message of illegal castling. Just an idea...
Nightstorm: Probably it is better to play Shatranj as Chaturanga rules are not exactly known. Some historicans even doubt at all if chaturanga really existed.
I played several games of Shatranj against ChessV and it is quite interesting. The only problem is that games are usually very long, probably twice as long as in chess.
Caissus: I didn't know fencer had said such a thing. In any case, I still think cylinder dark chess or maybe dark cylinder chess will be a very exciting variant. Just an idea!
Caissus: Team play encourages discussion and exchange of ideas, which is good for players; stronger players teach, which strengthens and verbalizes knowledge--while eager-to-learn players get new information and insight into the board.
Good news. I've just finished the FRC model and also updated the PGN generator for all chess variants supported on BK.
Now I only need to write the FRC rules and upload everything to the site.
But I prefer to use my position generator instead of keeping a database of all positions. Because it can be used for any similar chess variant, e.g. Corner Chess, Fortress Chess, etc.
to Fencer:
Thank you very much for enabling FRC here!
Would it be to hard to supply the FRC standard position number as e.g. 870 in the PGN file like
[Event "Casual Game 870"] ?
It would also be very helpful to see this number somewhere when the position will be displayed.
Subject: FRC - temporarily hiding of starting array
to Fencer:
Ok, I have learned that such things are not hard for you - fine! When I look at the way how an individual FRC game is constituting now, I have a suggestion again. Because it is essential to Ches960 / FRC, that the two players will get the information on the current position to play very short before the game is started, it might be a good idea to mask the base line of the starting array until the game is accepted or running. But this is only a cosmetic detail not a must have.
Subject: Re: FRC - temporarily hiding of starting array
Sumerian: It's a common concept of all BK games with a generated position. But, of course, it can be changed globally, so the position would be generated after the invitation is accepted, not before. Or, with less changes to the code, the position wouldn't be shown until the game is started.
to Fencer:
SMIRF can read and use it. But Smirf was built very tolerant towards violations of the PGN specification as long as the input will make any sense. Smirf is e.g. able to read notations written down in German instead of English. But there are some GUIs and tools which are very strict concerning PGN. As I told you SMIRF is already satisfied with the current status quo.
Modified by SMIRF Engine (21. January 2005, 15:48:39)
to Caissus:
No wonder about that, it is correct PGN. The problem is the moment, when castlings could or should happen! P.S.: I have written something on FRC-FEN to cover situations, where the Rook with castling rights is not the outermost one. BrainKing is merely encoding starting positions, so it is not relevant here. But if you want to encode even exotic positions with FEN, you will need a tool like Smirf or the FullChess FEN Editor.
How about Mini Chess? The rules are the same as standard chess (though I think I've seen a version where the pawns can't move 2 places at once when on first row) it's just the board that's smaller.
Anyway, should provide some faster games and I'm sure many begginers would be more inclined to play this smaller version.
And from my limited experience it's a good battle ground to train on How-to-avoid-a-stalemate-when-you-have-a-sure-win kind of games :)
How is it solved in real FRC tournaments, is every game provided a different random position? On BrainKing, all games of the same tournament start with the same position.
to Fencer:
As far as I have experienced it (like in the Chess Classic Mainz) the positions are common to all participants for a round and will be published with some minutes before the start of the round because the positions in real live have to be set up manually. Normaly positions would be skipped and redrawn if they already would have occurred during that tournament, but the chance for that is very small.
Sumerian: So what's the result? In a real tournament, one position is generated at the start and then used for all games? Or is it created for each game individually?
to Fencer:
Well, my answer would for sure be not representative. I avoid Blitz, Bullet and 6x6 board games. I wonder why to start a game without being ready to spend an appropriate amount of time. That is beyond of my understanding. But people are different.
Sumerian, Caissus: Ironically, the Hyper Backgammon (very fast and easy game) happened the third most popular game on BK only a week after its launch. The truth is that MANY people want to play simple and quick games.
Fencer: I actually use different positions in my FRCEC tournaments.
While there are some positions that are better for one side than the other, its a matter of luck to get a superior position than another one played by someone else in the tournament.
And since there is no standard opening theory in FRC, for us FRC players, one position isn't any better than another. It's a matter of the luck of the draw.
I would make it an option in your tournaments, same opening for all, or random positions everytime.
Make sure though that its not possible to draw randomly the standard chess opening.
Modified by SMIRF Engine (22. January 2005, 17:37:38)
to jcarrillovii:
Even if it was true that the advantage for one side might be greater than in traditional chess, this would not be relevant, because the players have not the time to prepare themself for that starting position. It is very important that starting arrays are drawn or published immediately before the playing time starts to run. And because Chess960 understands itself at a superset of classic chess it would be counter productive to exclude this special starting array number 518.
I also think we should not exclude special positions. And I disbelieve,that there are positions which are especially bad for the one or for the other side. Or can give anybody an example for such a position?
(hide) If you want to find out more about some games you can check the links section and see if you find any interesting links there. (pauloaguia) (show all tips)