Check out Symmetric Chess, our featured variant for March, 2024.

Enter Your Reply

The Comment You're Replying To
Joao Neto wrote on Thu, May 29, 2003 07:09 AM UTC:
In fact, when you take a Pawn and use it to promote a piece,
then you lose one piece (you cannot demote to an empty cell). 
It's not very good to have very few pieces because that 
implies on little manoeuvrability: one would be playing abstract
chess, the other just chess.

About Lawson's suggestion, it sounds good. That's the beauty
of new games, many open and unexplored possibilities, even 
if we always have to face that the game can be broken in the 
long term.

I've played two face 2 face games with a friend and the games
went ok. That's not enough to judge a game, but it is a good 
start :)

Edit Form

Comment on the page Abstract Chess

Quick Markdown Guide

By default, new comments may be entered as Markdown, simple markup syntax designed to be readable and not look like markup. Comments stored as Markdown will be converted to HTML by Parsedown before displaying them. This follows the Github Flavored Markdown Spec with support for Markdown Extra. For a good overview of Markdown in general, check out the Markdown Guide. Here is a quick comparison of some commonly used Markdown with the rendered result:

Top level header: <H1>

Block quote

Second paragraph in block quote

First Paragraph of response. Italics, bold, and bold italics.

Second Paragraph after blank line. Here is some HTML code mixed in with the Markdown, and here is the same <U>HTML code</U> enclosed by backticks.

Secondary Header: <H2>

  • Unordered list item
  • Second unordered list item
  • New unordered list
    • Nested list item

Third Level header <H3>

  1. An ordered list item.
  2. A second ordered list item with the same number.
  3. A third ordered list item.
Here is some preformatted text.
  This line begins with some indentation.
    This begins with even more indentation.
And this line has no indentation.

Alt text for a graphic image

A definition list
A list of terms, each with one or more definitions following it.
An HTML construct using the tags <DL>, <DT> and <DD>.
A term
Its definition after a colon.
A second definition.
A third definition.
Another term following a blank line
The definition of that term.