Enter Your Reply The Comment You're Replying To Joe Joyce wrote on Tue, May 9, 2006 12:57 AM UTC:GO CHESS Was well into the second mile of my walk, just past the local police and fire stations, when my comment to Gary about Go being just a ferz and wazir movement away from chess ran through my head, bringing the following train of thought. Play a game of Go. As you put your stones down, mark them with either an 'X' for ferz or a '+' for wazir. A stone gets an X if it is not connected to any friendly stones when it is placed. It gets a + if it is connected to one or more friendly stones. Captured pieces lose their markings. When the Go game is over, the captured stones are used to fill territory, the Go score is calculated, and the captured stones are removed from the board. Then the chess game starts. White moves one piece either along a line to the next intersection, W, or diagonally across a square to the opposite corner intersection, F. Last person with pieces wins the chess game, and scores one point per piece left. The total score is figured as the sum of the two. Still not chess, but getting there. Okay, no king? Make all the pieces pretenders. The last one left on a side gets promoted to king, with a king's W+F move. Still not chess? Drop the Go scoring. Play Go only for chesspiece placement, using all the rules of placement, capture, and when the game ends; but no score. More pieces? Allow a friendly piece to move onto and combine with another friendly piece. The N is a W-then-F mover, for example. Combos of Fs could build alfils, elephants, and bishops. Combos of Ws are dabbabahs and rooks. You could even set aside a certain number of moves at the beginning of the movement portion of the game to be used only for combining moves. You might even restrict all combining moves to this part of the game. You could have to make a single king, also. Now, you place your piece atoms and fight to destroy your opponents atoms in the placement stage, build your complex pieces in the combo stage, then play chess in the movement stage. This is Go morphed into chess, but where did it cross the line? Edit Form You may not post a new comment, because ItemID Big-board CV:s does not match any item.