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| Tags: chess |
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#1
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I am looking for information on a variation of 3D chess developed by a
Sacramento California Company in 1990. It was palyed in a 10x10x10 cube with the sides starting on oposite edges, (top front, bottom back). There was an extra piece added, I beleive they called it a duke,that had a 3D move. I used to have a book on it but have misplaced it and forgoten the name of the outfit that was pushing the game. Anybody have any ideas???? |
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#2
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#3
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On Thu, 09 Oct 2003 17:21:58 -0400, David J Bush
wrote, in part: It is usually not easy to checkmate a 3D king with fewer than four pieces. Even Glinski's hexagonal chess (two-dimensional) had, I think, a similar problem. I, too, have offended, having yet another form of 3D chess on my web site! I know that for hexagonal chess, I think the Wellisch moves are better, even though they are less analogous to those of regular Chess. Giving the King, in 3D chess, the move of the Alfil is probably what needs to be done. John Savard http://home.ecn.ab.ca/~jsavard/index.html |
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#4
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Yes the stacked boards wer a bit big, made a 5 foot tower. The squares
were only croshatchet shaded so you could still see through the thing quite well. The way the rules were set up you could checkmate with 3 peices. There was somthing about moving across the path of another piece that made the game a bit messy as you had small colored chips to mark out the controled area of various peices in 3D. The extra peice , I believe they called it a duke, had a 3D move and could not move in 2D only. |
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#5
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Are there currently any workable true 3D (played in a cube) chess games out there???
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#6
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On 20 Oct 2003 07:22:44 -0700, (jeff fairchild) wrote:
|Are there currently any workable true 3D (played in a cube) chess games | out there??? Perhaps the members of the 3-D Chess Federation would know: http://www.3dchessfederation.com/index.htm You might be interested in the software Zillions of Games, for which many 3-D chess variants have been written: http://www.zillionsofgames.com/ The generic Zillions engine usually plays decently any chess variant you care to define, so it provides a way of at least working out the basic tactics. (You can program other types of abstract games on it as well.) Here's the BoardGameGeek link for 3-D chess: http://www.boardgamegeek.com/viewitem.php3?gameid=3499 |
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