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| Tags: chess, modified, questions, rules, stupid |
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#1
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Suppose we take the chess rules and add a new one:
A1: You have the option of moving two pieces simultaneously, as long as each move considered separately was legal in 'single move' chess. The two pieces can't land on the same square, obviously. So you can't move a pawn, then the bishop behind it which was previously blocked by the moved pawn. Or, if your king is checked, you move your king, and move another piece to kill the check. I'm just wondering how drastic would a change be? Would a typical chess game have half the number of turns for each player? Would the games be faster? Would there be some opening trick that white can play that will always guarantee a win in a few turns? Now, if we were to look at the entire decision tree for double-move chess, it would be bigger than single-move chess, because double-move chess would have all the moves of single-move chess too. But now, let's look at the decision tree for those double-move chess games where two pieces were always moved if legal to do so. Would the tree be roughly twice as wide but half as deep as the single-move chess decision tree? I know silly questions... just curious to know the answer. |
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#2
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#3
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In
, Harold Buck typed: Two moves in a row is such a huge advantage that in Monster Chess (white gets Ke1, Pc2d2e2f2 and two moves per turn, black gets the normal setup and one move per turn) is pretty much a forced win for white. On the contrary, with careful play, Black should win. It isn't easy, and if you never seen it before, Black is very hard to play, but nevertheless it's better for Black. -- Ken Blake Please reply to the newsgroup |
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#4
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In article ,
"Ken Blake" wrote: In , Harold Buck typed: Two moves in a row is such a huge advantage that in Monster Chess (white gets Ke1, Pc2d2e2f2 and two moves per turn, black gets the normal setup and one move per turn) is pretty much a forced win for white. On the contrary, with careful play, Black should win. It isn't easy, and if you never seen it before, Black is very hard to play, but nevertheless it's better for Black. Really? I thought I'd read that it was hugely in white's favor. In any case, the fact that it's even playable shows how important those extra moves are. --Harold Buck "I used to rock and roll all night, and party every day. Then it was every other day. . . ." -Homer J. Simpson |
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#5
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In
, Harold Buck typed: In article , "Ken Blake" wrote: In , Harold Buck typed: Two moves in a row is such a huge advantage that in Monster Chess (white gets Ke1, Pc2d2e2f2 and two moves per turn, black gets the normal setup and one move per turn) is pretty much a forced win for white. On the contrary, with careful play, Black should win. It isn't easy, and if you never seen it before, Black is very hard to play, but nevertheless it's better for Black. Really? I thought I'd read that it was hugely in white's favor. In any case, the fact that it's even playable shows how important those extra moves are. Yes, I agree. -- Ken Blake Please reply to the newsgroup |
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#6
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"FreddyFoobar" wrote in message
om Suppose we take the chess rules and add a new one: A1: You have the option of moving two pieces simultaneously, as long as each move considered separately was legal in 'single move' chess. The two pieces can't land on the same square, obviously. Hi, it's not a stupid question at all. See the website http://homepages.stayfree.co.uk/gpj/gvc.htm and scroll down to "Two-Move Chess". Marco -- Posted via Mailgate.ORG Server - http://www.Mailgate.ORG |
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