The good advice - plus my conclusion - that it takes 4 Thai Chess Queens
to checkmate the Thai Chess King is based on practical and realistic
considerations: That is an advice that is focused to a player who wants
to play real matches of Thai Chess against real adversaries - and who wants
to win those matches.
Background: true - if you let calculate the moves by a computer it is
possible to checkmate the 'naked' King of Siam by an enemy King plus 3
Queens only.
But that possibility is just theory: it has nothing to do with real
matches on the board.
If you are playing a real match - and if you are unwise enough to capture
the whole enemy army except the opposite King - then a special rule of
Thai Chess is going to get effective: YOU HAVE TO START COUNTING the
legal
moves to checkmate the naked king - and that is LESS than 50 moves.
The number of legal moves is dependant on a specific and rather obscure
system of counting your own pieces and the enemy pieces plus applying a
system of evaluation of the type of pieces that are left on the board
plus
the number of moves that are legal under that very consideration and
under
that very evaluation of the very kind of pieces that are left on the
board.
That difficult system is explained - to name one example - at
. Frankly spoken I do not understand that
system - and as the great chess journalist Tim Krabbé/The Netherlands has
reported on his experiences with the Cambodian Ouk Chatrang (that happens
to be quasi identical to Mak Rook)that system seems to be difficult to
understand, so that very system is inviting to (most friendly, of
course!)
manipulations by Thai adversaries during matches against 'farang', the
foreigners.
That is the real background for my most practical advice: do not be too
confident that you have, whilst playing a match of Mak Rook, enough
time/moves left for check-mating your opponent's King by the help of
King
& 3 Queens - by some 20,30 moves or so; maybe you have not applied that
specific Thai system of counting the legal number of moves that are left
for legally check-mating well enough ... and your opponent will declare
the match to be 'drawn', to your great dismay and frustration (and, if
you do not believe that, please read again that funny reportage by Tim
Krabbé on his chess trip to Cambodia - that has happened to him).
So, if you have the chance to achieve that, I am sticking to my good
advice: If you have the chance it is better to get 4 Queens instead of
three; and please be careful enough not to eat all the pieces of your
adversary if you are not forced to do so.
What is Queen no. 4 good for during the finale of a match? That Queen can
flexibly be used for two purposes - on the one hand, to close the drag
net
that is encircling the enemy King (and how that can be executed that is
demonstrated by our game of demonstration);on the other hand, to avoid
Zugzwang on your part and to use Zugzwang as a weapon - that is forcing
your opponent into that position that will lead him into doom (again that
match of demonstration that has been published in the foregoing is
demonstrating how that way of operating will work).
True: in the end you will watch - as in the sample game just discussed in
the foregoing is demonstrated - that three Queens are enough for the
composition of the final position of checkmate; but the long way to reach
that position that has been much easier to go because of the Black Army
having been able to mobilize 4 Queens instead of a threesome.
So, again, the good advice of our headliner is a good advice for a
practitioner who wants to test Mak Rook in real play: 4 Queens are a very
convenient way to checkmate the enemy King of Mak Rook in due time - if
you have 'only' 3 Queens then there is the strong risk that you will
not
reach checkmate before your opponent will trumpet 'drawn!'.
Dr. René Gralla, Hamburg/Germany
Background: true - if you let calculate the moves by a computer it is possible to checkmate the 'naked' King of Siam by an enemy King plus 3 Queens only. But that possibility is just theory: it has nothing to do with real matches on the board. If you are playing a real match - and if you are unwise enough to capture the whole enemy army except the opposite King - then a special rule of Thai Chess is going to get effective: YOU HAVE TO START COUNTING the legal moves to checkmate the naked king - and that is LESS than 50 moves.
True: in the end you will watch - as in the sample game just discussed in the foregoing is demonstrated - that three Queens are enough for the composition of the final position of checkmate; but the long way to reach that position that has been much easier to go because of the Black Army having been able to mobilize 4 Queens instead of a threesome. So, again, the good advice of our headliner is a good advice for a practitioner who wants to test Mak Rook in real play: 4 Queens are a very convenient way to checkmate the enemy King of Mak Rook in due time - if you have 'only' 3 Queens then there is the strong risk that you will not reach checkmate before your opponent will trumpet 'drawn!'.
Dr. René Gralla, Hamburg/Germany