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"Pawns may only promote to a piece that has been taken by the opponent" is ambiguous. Does it mean:
- A pawn may not promote to a piece unless at least one of the starting pieces has been taken (and thus the board will always have at most the same set of 7 capturable pieces), i.e. if my opponent captures my rook I may promote only one pawn to a rook and may not promote again until my opponent captures another piece; or
- A pawn may promote to any piece that the opponent has ever captured, i.e. if my opponent captures my rook I may thereafter promote as many pawns to rooks as I please?
The first move has to be illegal, so Black Pawn cannot on the first move take a White Pawn that has moved 1 P-a2. Since it is legal move for Black, he cannot do so on move 1.
Not on Black's first turn. It is 'illegal move' for any White pawn or piece to go from starting array to a2 or h2, so she is free to do so for the illegal opening requirement. The two Pawns of Black on b and g have the move to capture a2 or h2 but that would be legal. Each first move has to be illegal. Black may then take a piece on a2 or h2 turn 2 onward by any legal move. Actually both players have to occupy, attack, or protect respectively c6 and c3 on their first move, the only illegal moving of piece or Pawn. Otherwise they are subject to immediate checkmate by and if Knight reaching c6/c3. The article shows historical 'Resign' on move 2 by Wolf. That scenario is kind of a flaw or bust or cook to this CV, forcing limited line of development. Solution there is just to place the second b-Pawns at 5 and 4 instead.
What happen in case white player move to a2 or to h2 can they be captured
http://www.pathguy.com/chess/PattScha.htm Patt-schach is a good exemple improving well for Upside-Down Chess.
I think it would be interesting if you lose if all of your pieces can make a legal move.
Good question. This is the opposite of what you mean. Almost.
I maintain the starting arrays within Passed Pawns Chess and Passed Pawns, Scorpions and Dragon are improvements over this 'advanced pawns' concept. I did not find Patt-schach and Upside-Down Chess right away(although I knew I had seen them about 1996), as references for those two variant pages from 2003, designed equally to highlight Falcon move.
No, you can't. The white pawns are moving UP the board, and the black are moving DOWN.
How is this position stalemate? Can't you move your pawns???
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The former is a common rule in other games, but I don't know of any game where the latter is a rule.