Peter Aronson wrote on Sun, Apr 14, 2002 04:11 PM UTC:
I use a very simple rule for detrmining what's an
Ultima variant or not: if
the author calls it an Ultima variant, it is; if not, it isn't. So The Game of Nemoroth and my game
Interweave are not Ultima
variants since they don't call themselves that (although Interweave
describes itself has being sort of Ultima-like).
Examining this site and The Encyclopedia of Chess Variants, I find
the following Ultima Variants:
Bogart's Chess, which replaces a Chameleon and a Long Leaper
with an Absorber (which picks up the capture method of each piece it
captures) and a Golem, which only moves two but has to be captured twice
(this was the inspiration for
Golem Chess).
Renaissance, which is played on a 9x9 board, and adds a Pusher,
a Puller, a Resurrector, and a Bomb, and has a limited form of drops of
captured pieces (using the Resurrector).
Stupid, where each piece can
move like an Ultima piece and an Orthochess piece.
Ulti-Matem, except the Pawns have the moves of the Orthochess
pieces they would be standing in front of, except for the King's Pawn which
is a Double Knight Pawn which makes two Knight's moves in a row in any
pattern.
Ultimate Ultima which you described in this comment system
here.
Unorthodox Ultima, in which a Long Leaper and a Chameleon are
replaced by a Neutalizer (which removes the ability to capture of adjacent
pieces) and a Repeller which forces an opposing piece moved next to move as
far away as possible.
So look at them. All of them at the very least add some additional types
of pieces. All of them are more complex than Ultima. Although, no one has
take the simple, logical, and completely insane step of combining Ultima
and Chessgi/Shogi.
Ultigi! Ultima with drops! Ah, maybe not.
Examining this site and The Encyclopedia of Chess Variants, I find the following Ultima Variants: