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Jeremy Good wrote on Sun, Apr 1, 2007 08:19 PM UTC:
This quotation of Ralph Betza comes from this essay on crooked bishops and other crooked pieces.

'I hereby also stake my claim to the discovery of the Crooked Queen and the Crooked KnightRider. Duh. :-)

In the opening position, a Crooked KnightRider on b1 can play 1. zNNb1-e4, double check and mate.'

I am having a hard time conceptualizing the Crooked Knightrider and how it moves. I want someone to help me visualize its movement. Could someone do an ASCII diagram for me? And / or try to break it down for me so I understand it better.

I think I'm on the verge of understanding it but I don't yet. I did read that Joerg Knappen's idea for Nachtmahr was derived partly from Betza's impression that the Crooked Nightrider was too powerful, so Knappen thought to break it down into different crooked nightrider components. I have a feeling if I studied this essay more carefully, it would come to me but I prefer to have a bit of help.


Jörg Knappen wrote on Wed, Oct 29, 2008 08:54 AM UTC:
Since you already found the Nachtmahr page, here is an explanation: In
order to move from b1 to e4, the Crooked Nightrider must contain the
diagonal narrow crooked nightrider. In order to checkmate the poor king
from e4 it must contain the straight narrow crooked nightrider. We cannot
conclude whether it contains more components from that little bit of
information, hence in a strict interpretation the two components mentioned
make up Betza's Crooked Nightrider.

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