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Colorful Osmosis Chess

Colorful Osmosis Chess uses four basic piece types (plus Kings and Pawns). Two basic pieces are colorbound and two are colorswitching. Of the colorbound pieces, one is a slider and the other is a leaper; likewise for the colorswitching pieces. Basic pieces can create compond pieces by capturing enemy pieces, in some games this process is called absorbtion, here I use the synonym osmosis. Colorful Osmosis Chess is played on a ten-by-ten board.

Setup

 

 

 

White's  pieces are set up  as follows: Camels on the corners. From left to right on the second rank are Harvestman, Knight,  Bishop, King, Bishop, Knight, and Harvestman. On the third rank are ten Pawns, Black's army is placed in mirror symmetric positions  on the eighth, ninth and tenth ranks. Because of the limitations of the Diagram Designer, the Harvestman is represented as the Rook icon but it has a different move.

Pieces

Basic Pieces

Compound Pieces

Rules

The usual FIDE checkmate, stalemate, triple repetition and fifty-move rules apply. In addition, promotion is not limited to Pawns.Basic pieces may promote as follows:

  1. Capturings a Pawn or the corresponing basic piece it does cause promotion.
  2. Captureing any other basic piece resuls in promotion to the compund piece with the combined move of captor and captive.
  3. Capturing compound piece which shares the captor's move, results in promotiion to the piece captured (in essence the captive swiches sides).
  4. Capturing a compound piece which does not share the captor's move, results in promotion to a compound piece combing the captor's move with one but not both of the captive's basic moves. (Capturing player chooses.)

Thisi process iof promotion by capture is called osmosis.

Notes

Colorful Osmosis Chess began as an effort to use both colorbound and colorswiching sliders and leapers. Three of them are Bishop, Kinght, and Camel. For the fourth basic piece I used Jörg Knappen's Harvestman from his Seenschach.  The osmosis rules are adapted from the assimilation rules of Fergus Duniho's Assimilation Chess with the following changes:

The abscence of castling ,Pawn promotion before the last rank, and especially the promotion of non-Pawn pieces is reminiscent of Shogi. Osmosis (promotion by captute) is found in several large Shogi variants such as Maka Dai Dai Shogi as well as Assimilation Chess.

 



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By Michael Nelson.

Last revised by Michael Nelson.


Web page created: 2023-10-27. Web page last updated: 2024-01-21

Revisions of MScolorfulosmosischess