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Hexagonal chess

Hexagonal chess is a group of chess variants played on boards composed of hexagon cells. The best known is Gliński's variant, played on a symmetric 91-cell hexagonal board.

Gliński's hexagonal chess, launched in 1949, became popular in Eastern Europe, reaching half a million fans. Three cell colours and three bishops per side are the norm for hexagonal variants.

Since each hexagonal cell not on a board edge has six neighbor cells, there is increased mobility for pieces compared to a standard orthogonal chessboard. (E.g., a rook has six natural directions for movement instead of four.) Three colours are typically used so that no two neighboring cells are the same colour, and a colour-restricted game piece such as the orthodox chess bishop usually comes in sets of three per player in order to maintain the game's balance.

Many different shapes and sizes of hexagon-based boards are used by variants. The nature of the game is also affected by the 30° orientation of the board's cells; the board can be horizontally (Wellisch's, de Vasa's, Brusky's) or vertically (Gliński's, Shafran's, McCooey's) oriented. (E.g., when the sides of hexagonal cells face the players, pawns typically have one straightforward move direction. If a variant's gameboard has cell vertices facing the players, pawns typically have two oblique-forward move directions.) The possibility of a hexagon-based board with three-fold rotational symmetry has also resulted in a number of three-player variants.

The first applications of chess on hexagonal boards probably occurred mid-19th century, but two early examples did not include checkmate as the winning objective. More chess-like games for hexagon-based boards started appearing regularly at the beginning of the 20th century. Hexagon-celled gameboards have grown in use for strategy games generally; for example, they are popularly used in modern wargaming.

Gliński's hexagonal chess

Gliński's hexagonal chess, invented by Władysław Gliński in 1936 and first launched in Britain in 1949, is "probably the most widely played of the hexagonal chess games".[1] The game was popular in Eastern Europe, especially in Gliński's native Poland. At one point there were more than half a million players, and more than 130,000 board sets were sold.[2] Gliński's book Rules of Hexagonal Chess was published in 1973.[3]

Rules

The rules are the same as those of orthodox chess except as follows.

The game is played on a vertically oriented regular hexagonal board with sides 6 cells long, which has 91 hex cells having three colours (light, dark, and mid-tone), with the middle cell (or "hex") usually mid-tone.[4] The usual set of chess pieces is increased by one bishop and one pawn. The board has 11 files, marked by letters al (letter j is not used), and 11 numbered ranks (which bend 60° at file f). Ranks 1–6 each contain 11 cells, rank 7 (filled with black pawns in the initial setup) has 9 cells, rank 8 has 7, and so on. Rank 11 contains exactly one cell: f11.

 
Rook moves
 
Bishop moves
 
Queen moves
 
King moves
 
Knight moves
 
Pawn moves, captures (marked with crosses), promotion cells for White (marked with stars)

The moves of the pieces are as follows:

  • The rook may move any number of cells orthogonally, traveling through cell edges.
  • The bishop may move any number of cells diagonally, traveling through cell vertices.
  • The queen may move any number of cells orthogonally or diagonally.
  • The king may move one cell orthogonally or diagonally. There is no castling.
  • The knight may move two cells orthogonally in one direction and then one cell orthogonally at a 60° angle, jumping over intervening pieces. Equivalently, the knight may move to any nearest cell not on an orthogonal or diagonal line on which it stands.
  • The pawn may move one vacant cell vertically forward. If it stands on its starting cell or on the starting cell of any other pawn of its color, then it is also allowed to move two vacant cells vertically forward. It may capture one cell orthogonally forward at a 60° angle to the vertical, including capturing en passant. (This capturing move is not diagonal, unlike in orthodox chess.) It is promoted when it reaches the end of any file.

In the pawn diagram, if the pawn on e4 were to capture a black piece on f5, then the pawn would retain the option to move to f7. If the black pawn on c7 in the diagram moves to c5 in a single move, the white pawn on b5 can capture it en passant: bxc6.

Stalemate is not a draw in Gliński's chess, but it is still counted as less than checkmate: in tournament games, the player who delivers stalemate earns 34 point, and the stalemated player (the player without a legal move) receives 14 point.

A numeric (or international) notation exists. Every detail is exactly as in ICCF numeric notation except that there is no castling.

Observations

Unlike in orthodox chess, a king and two knights can mate a king. A knight can triangulate. A player's three bishops, relegated to different colours, can never defend each other. In the initial setup, the white pawn on f5 cannot make a double step to f7, which is occupied by a black pawn; however, the double-step move could be possible later if f7 becomes empty.

Timeline

  • 1976. June: First Hexagonal Chess Congress at Bloomsbury Centre Hotel, London, which included the inauguration of the British Hexagonal Chess Federation and the first British Hexagonal Chess Championship. David Springgay took the title. (Deceased 12.2.18) December: First issue of "Hex Press" (Hexagonal Chess News) published.
  • 1977. Hexagonal Chess was topic for many newspapers and magazines in Poland and other Eastern European countries. December: Second British Championship held at Clifton-Ford Hotel, London. Brian Rippon took the title.
  • 1978. January: Inventor visited Poland. Successful Hexagonal Chess event staged. Wide publicity in Eastern Europe. 'Wspolna Sprawa' produced and distributed over 90,000 inexpensive sets in 18 months. September: First International Team Match – Poland vs. Great Britain at Central Hall, Westminster, London. Event shown on BBC and Australian TV, reported in press at home and abroad – including Japan.
  • 1979. July: Third British Championship held at Polish Cultural Institute, London. Title taken by Simon Triggs, nearly 16 years old. August: Return International Team Match – Poland vs. Great Britain in Warsaw. Sponsored by magazine "Horyzonty Techniki" (which includes a regular column on Hexagonal Chess). Whilst in Poland, Simon Triggs played the first mixed (6 square and 6 hexagonal boards) simultaneous display. Hexagonal Chess clubs formed in Poland, Czechoslovakia and USSR.
  • 1980. August: International Congress at Polish Cultural Institute, London, which included: Inauguration of International Hexagonal Chess Federation, First European Championship, Team Match: Poland v Great Britain Countries taking part: Austria, Great Britain, Hungary and Poland. Event covered by BBC TV and newspapers at home and abroad, including USSR ("Komsomolskaya Pravda" – 10,500,000 circulation), Austria and Hungary. Also radio in USA. First four places: 1: Marek Mackowiak (Poland), 2: Laszlo Rudolf (Hungary), 3: Jan Borawski (Poland), 4: Piers Shepperson (Great Britain).
  • 1981. September: First Hungarian Hexagonal Chess Championship in Szekszard. Title taken by Laszlo Sziraki. Fourth British Championship held at Woodford Bridge, Essex. Local and National press coverage, including picture in "The Times". Four players tied for first place. Final playoff arranged for October. October: Playoff held in association with the North London (square-board) Congress, when Simon Triggs retained his title.
  • 1982. April: Second Hungarian Championship held in Miscolc. Laszlo Rudolf became the Hungarian Champion for 1982. June: Final agreement and arrangements completed with "Bohemia" in West Germany regarding production of a new complete Hexagonal Chess boxed game with roll-up double-sided board (hexagonal/square) and wooden pieces to be distributed in the West European market. July: An open Hexagonal Chess Tournament was held on 10 and 11 July in the famous Sokolniki Park in Moscow. Players from Moscow and elsewhere in the USSR took part in the competition. First place and the "Moscow Trophy" were taken by F. Goncharov. Second was S. Seryubin and Third V. Goltyapin. Judging from the reports received, this tournament has considerably accelerated the development and popularity of Hex Chess in the USSR. Further tournaments, including international team matches (over-the-board and correspondence) are being organized. Open International Tournament held in Pecs, Hungary, 24–31 July. This tournament was organized by the President of the Hungarian Hexagonal Chess Association, Mihaly Gelencser, and sponsored by the Zsolnay porcelain factory in Pecs, which also donated the "Zsolnay Cup" as well as other prizes of porcelain figures. The winner of the Tournament was Laszlo Rudolf (Hungary). Second place was taken by Simon Triggs (Great Britain). September: Fifth British Championship held in London. Simon Triggs (19) of Garston, Hertfordshire, won the title of British Hexagaonal Chess Champion for the third time in succession. Press Association attended and wrote lengthy background. All the "quality newspapers" took photographs. LBC Radio and BBC Radio London broadcast interviews.

Shafran's hexagonal chess

 
Shafran's hexagonal chess, starting position

Invented by Soviet geologist Isaak Grigorevich Shafran in 1939 and registered in 1956. It was demonstrated at the Worldwide Chess Exhibition in Leipzig in 1960.

The board is shaped as an irregular hexagon with nine files and ten ranks, comprising 70 cells as opposed to 91 in Gliński's board. The files are labelled a to i; the oblique ranks running diagonally from 10 to 4 o'clock are numbered 1 to 10. For example (see diagram), the two kings start on e1 and e10; White's rooks start on a1 and i5, and Black's rooks start on a6 and i10. Each player calls the left-hand side of the board his "queen's flank" and the right-hand side his "bishops' flank"; note that they do not correlate (White's queen's flank is Black's bishops' flank).

All pieces except pawns and kings move and capture exactly as in Gliński's chess. In Shafran's chess, a pawn's first move can take it to the middle of the file. (So, the d-, e-, and f-pawns can make a three-step initial move; the b-, c-, g-, and h-pawns can make a double-step initially; and the a- and i-pawns can advance only one step.) A pawn captures diagonally like a bishop, but one step away (one rank and one file). When a pawn makes a multi-step move, it is subject to being captured en passant.

 
Castling and en passant capture

In the diagram, the black pawn on d8 has three possible moves, but none is safe: after 1... d7 it can be captured 2. exd7; after 1... d6 it can be captured 2. exd7 e.p. or 2. cxd6; after 1... d5 it can be captured en passant by either pawn.

Kings move as in Gliński's chess, except that castling is permitted in Shafran's chess (unlike Gliński's or McCooey's). The usual restrictions apply. It can be long or short castling in either direction. The notation consists of Q- or B- (indicating whether the queen's or the bishops' rook is used) followed by 0-0-0 (long castling: the king moves next to the rook and the rook jumps over it) or 0-0 (short castling, the king moves one cell less distance). In the diagram, the black king on h10 has castled long queenside (1... Q-0-0-0) and the black king on c8 has castled short bishopside (1... B-0-0). Castling does not typically increase the king's safety or make the rook more active, but it is present in the game nonetheless, for completeness.

Stalemate is a draw in Shafran's chess.

De Vasa's hexagonal chess

 
De Vasa's hexagonal chess, starting position. This array of pieces on the players' first ranks was first proposed by de Vasa.[5]

Invented by Helge E. de Vasa in 1953 and first published in Joseph Boyer's Nouveaux Jeux d'Echecs Non-orthodoxes (Paris, 1954). The rhombus-shaped board comprises 81 cells with initial setup as shown, in the revised form of the game. Rules for piece movement are the same as Gliński's variant, except for the pawns. Castling is permitted, and kings start on opposite wings of the board.[6][7]

Players may castle either short (0-0) or long (0-0-0). The king slides two cells when castling short; three cells when castling long. Other standard chess castling rules and restrictions apply.

Pawn's move

Pawns start on the players' third ranks. A pawn moves forward to an adjacent cell, or (as its first-move option), two cells forward in the same direction. A pawn captures diagonally forward to the sides (to a cell of the same colour on which the pawn stands).

 
The white pawn on b3, since it has not yet moved, has four move options (green dots) and two ways to capture (red dots). The white pawn on g5 has moved from its initial cell, so has two move options and two ways to capture. If Black moves his f7-pawn to either f6 or f5, White can capture it, for example: 1... f7-f5 2. g5xf6 e.p. In the diagram, White has castled short (0-0) and Black has castled long (0-0-0).

Brusky's hexagonal chess

 
Brusky's hexagonal chess, starting position. The first-rank piece array was first proposed by Helge E. de Vasa (see De Vasa's hexagonal chess).

Invented by Yakov Brusky in 1966. The game features an irregular hexagon board comprising 84 cells. Piece movement rules are the same as Gliński's chess, except for the pawns, of which there are ten instead of Gliński's nine. Other differences from Gliński's: castling is permitted; kings start on opposite wings of the board; and draws are worth half a point.[8][9]

Players may castle either short (0-0) or long (0-0-0). The king slides two cells when castling short; three cells when castling long. Normal castling rules and restrictions apply.

As in algebraic notation, each cell is identified by a letter+number combination. Ranks are horizontal and identified by numbers 18. files are straight and 30° oblique to the vertical, identified by letters al. Moves can be recorded in long algebraic notation (LAN) to avoid confusion, for example: 1. d2-f4 rather than 1. df4.

Pawn's move

A pawn moves forward to an adjacent cell, or (as its first-move option), two cells forward in the same direction. If an enemy man blocks a pawn from moving in one of its two forward move directions, then that pawn is automatically blocked from moving in the other direction as well. But if the blocking man is a friendly piece the effect is not the same—the pawn is still free to move in the unblocked direction.

 
The white pawn on c2, since it has not yet moved, has four move options (green dots) and three ways to capture (red dots). The white pawn on i3 has moved from its initial cell, so has two move options and two ways to capture. The white pawn on g5 and black pawn on h6 block each other from any forward moves. But if Black moves his f7-pawn to either f6 or f5, White can capture it, for example: 1... f7-f5 2. g5xf6 e.p.

A pawn captures diagonally forward, to a cell of the same colour on which the pawn stands. But only a pawn on its initial cell may capture straight forward; once a pawn has moved, it may capture only to the sides. (So, unless it is a wing pawn, an unmoved pawn has three capturing possibilities; a pawn that has moved, two.) En passant captures are permitted in Brusky's chess.

Endgame studies

These endgame studies apply to Brusky's hexagonal variant:

  • king + rook can checkmate a lone king;
  • king + two knights can checkmate a lone king;
  • king + two bishops can checkmate a lone king;
  • king + bishop + knight can checkmate a lone king.

McCooey's hexagonal chess

 
McCooey's hexagonal chess, starting position

In 1978–79 Dave McCooey and Richard Honeycutt developed another variation of hexagonal chess very similar to Gliński's, having four differences: the starting array (including seven pawns per side instead of nine); the pawn's capturing move; pawns on the f-file are not permitted an initial double step; and stalemate is counted as a draw (players receive half a point).[10]

Pawn's move

This diagram shows the pawn's move in McCooey's variant. The capturing move corresponds to a bishop's move: e.g. if the black pawn on e8 advances to e6, the white pawn on d5 may capture it en passant.

 
The pawn's move

In the starting position, the f-file pawns may not advance two steps like the other pawns. The f-pawns are also not defended in the opening array, and in fact smothered mate would result if it were captured by a knight, although this possibility would rarely occur in practical play.

Endgame studies

These endgame studies apply to both Gliński's and McCooey's variants:[11]

  • king + two knights can checkmate a lone king;
  • king + rook beats king + knight (no fortress draws and a negligible number (0.0019%) of perpetual check draws);
  • king + rook beats king + bishop (no fortress draws and no perpetual check draws);
  • king + two bishops cannot checkmate a lone king, except for some very rare positions (0.17%);
  • king + knight + bishop cannot checkmate a lone king, except for some very rare positions (0.5%);
  • king + queen does not beat king + rook: 4.3% of the positions are perpetual check draws, and 37.2% are fortress draws;
  • king + rook can checkmate a lone king.

Starchess

 
Starchess, one possible starting position
 
Pawn moves
 
King moves
 
Knight moves
 
Rook moves
 
Bishop moves
 
Queen moves

Starchess is a hexagonal variant invented by Hungarian chess teacher László Polgár.[12] The board is a horizontally oriented regular hexagram, consisting of 37 numbered cells. Due to the small board, games typically finish quicker than in standard chess.[12]

Each player has five pawns, a king, knight, bishop, rook, and queen. The white pawns start at cells 5, 12, 18, 23, and 29; the black pawns at 9, 15, 20, 26, and 33. At the beginning of the game, the players place their other pieces alternately on the cells behind their pawns (White: 4, 11, 17, 22, 28; Black: 10, 16, 21, 27, 34). As a consequence, there are (5!)²=14400 possible setups.

Pawns move one step vertically forward and capture one step orthogonally left-forward or right-forward, and have an initial double-step option (identical to Gliński's pawn); there is no en passant capture. The promotion zone for white pawns consists of Black's back rank (cells 10, 16, 21, 27, and 34), and for black pawns, White's back rank (cells 4, 11, 17, 22, and 28). A pawn that has lost its initial double-step option by making a capture is called a "limping pawn"; a pawn that ended up on cells 2, 3, 35, or 36 is called a "dead pawn"; a pawn on cells 1 or 37 is called a "mummy".

The king moves one step in any orthogonal direction; there is no castling. The knight jumps, two steps in any orthogonal direction, followed by one step in a different direction (identical to Gliński's knight). The rook can move any number of steps, but only vertically; the bishop can move any number of steps, but not vertically. The queen combines the moves of the rook and the bishop, and thus can move any number of steps in any orthogonal direction (identical to Gliński's rook).


Other hexagonal variants

  • The first published hexagonal chess variant was the commercial game Hexagonia,[13][14] invented in 1864 by John Jaques & Son. The board has 127 cells; each side has 1 king, 2 cannons, 4 knights and 8 pawns. The winning objective is not checkmate, but rather to safely bring one's king to the central board cell.
  • Siegmund Wellisch published a three-player Wellisch's hexagonal chess variant in 1912. The board is a regular hexagon with sides of length 6, which consists of 91 cells; however, it is oriented horizontally. Each side has eight pawns, three knights, two rooks, one queen, and one king. There are no bishops. The pawn moves and attacks one step in one of two orthogonally forward directions; there is no initial double-step, nor en passant capture. The king moves one step in any orthogonal direction. The knight jumps one step in any diagonal direction, and is thus colour-bound. The rook moves any number of steps in one of six orthogonal directions. The queen combines the moves of a rook and a knight. Castling involves the king and a rook simply swapping places.[15]
  • McCooey also developed a variant called Mini Hexchess, which uses a vertically oriented regular hexagon with sides of length 4, which consists of 37 hexes. Each player has a king, a knight, a bishop, a rook, and five pawns.
  • Mathewson's hexagonal chess uses nine McCooey's pawns, which are set up at b1, c2, d2, e3, f4, g3, h2, i2, and k1 (for White; Black's are mirrored). For everything else it is identical to Gliński's.
  • REX chess was invented in 1997 by Arnaldo Rodrigues D'Almeida. It is played on a horizontally oriented rectangular-shaped board, which consists of 85 hexes. Kings move one step in any orthogonal direction, pawns move and attack one step orthogonally forward (two directions); all other pieces behave as in Gliński's. Setup is similar to de Vasa's, except that each side has 15 pawns, ten on the second rank and five on the third.[16]
  • In 1998 Derick Peterson invented Grand Hexachess. This variant uses a regular hexagon with sides of length 7, which consists of 127 hexes; the board is oriented horizontally, with each player's pieces on opposite sides. Pawns then have two possible forward moves (forward left and forward right) and three possible diagonal capturing moves (one directly in front). Precisely this was the motivation for this design, considering the fact that usually the hexagonal chess pawn is the only piece that does not increase its mobility.[17]
  • Chexs is a multiplayer variant; the version for two and three players uses a regular hexagon with sides of length 6, which consists of 91 cells, the four–six player version uses a regular hexagon with sides of length 9, which has 217 cells; pieces move as in Gliński's, but the setup is different; each player starts with only two bishops, and all bishops are on same-coloured cells. A checkmated player is defeated; the player who gave checkmate takes over control of the pieces of the defeated player; the winner is the player who has checkmated all his opponents.[18]
  • Echexs uses the same boards as Chexs, the same moves as Gliński's, but McCooey's setup.[19]
  • C'escacs 2007 is a Grand Gliński chess; the board is shaped as a regular hexagon with sides of length 8, which consists of 169 cells. In addition to the Gliński's setup, it introduces a dragon (empress, a rook+knight compound), two pegasi (princesses, bishop+knight compound) and two almogavars (a (2,0)- and (1,1)-leaper compound, i.e. it can jump either to the second square in any orthogonal direction, or move one step diagonally). Pawns' moves are increased to allow forward 60° moves (i.e. they now have three move directions instead of one), and captures are the same way McCooey's chess (i.e. they capture diagonally forward, two options). The scornful pawn capture additional rule counterbalances the excessive pawn mobility.[20]

See also

References

  1. ^ Pritchard (2007), p. 203.
  2. ^ Pritchard (1994), p. 139.
  3. ^ Hooper & Whyld (1996), hexagonal chess, p. 172.
  4. ^ Wladyslow Gliński. Rules of Hexagonal Chess. ISBN 0-904195-00-7.
  5. ^ Jelliss, G. P. (July–December 1992). "New Varieties of Hexagonal Chess". Variant Chess. Vol. 1, no. 8. British Chess Variants Society. pp. 97–112. ISSN 0958-8248.
  6. ^ Pritchard (1994), pp. 141–42.
  7. ^ Pritchard (2007), pp. 209–10.
  8. ^ Pritchard (1994), pp. 142–43.
  9. ^ Pritchard (2007), p. 210.
  10. ^ McCooey's Hexagonal Chess by Dave McCooey.
  11. ^ Endgame analysis for Hexagonal Chess by Dave McCooey.
  12. ^ a b "Polgár Starchess".
  13. ^ Pritchard (1994), p. 143.
  14. ^ Pritchard (2007), p. 297.
  15. ^ "Wellisch's hexagonal chess".
  16. ^ "REX".
  17. ^ Peterson, Derick (1998-02-10). "Derick Peterson's Grand Hexachess". The Chess Variant Pages.
  18. ^ "Chexs".
  19. ^ "Echexs".
  20. ^ "C'escacs".

Bibliography

Further reading

External links

  • a bilingual comment on having three kinds of bishops
  • Chess for three, which summarily describes Wellisch' three-player chess and dozens of other three-player chess variants (triangular, hexagonal, quadrilateral, and others)
  • Green Chess is a free online chess portal where you can play the Gliński, McCooey, Shafran, Brusky and de Vasa variations in a turn by turn manner
  • 91-cell hexagonal chessboard—a printable diagram of a 91-cell hexagonal chessboard

Gliński variant

  • Glinski's Hexagonal Chess by Hans Bodlaender, The Chess Variant Pages
  • Rules Russian page translated to English via Alta Vista 2020-11-27 at the Wayback Machine
  • Scatha a free GUI and engine for Mac OS which plays Gliński's hexagonal chess
  • Hexagonal Chess (1936) at BoardGameGeek
  • Glinski's Hexagonal Chess a simple program by Ed Friedlander (Java)
  • Glinski's Hexagonal Chess See detailed rule descriptions, piece movements and play this variant on Omnichess

McCooey variant

Shafran variant

  • Hexagonal Chess by I G Shafran by Ivan Derzhanski
  • Shafran's Hexagonal Chess a simple program by Ed Friedlander (Java)

Brusky variant

  • Brusky's Hexagonal Chess a simple program by Ed Friedlander (Java)

Starchess variant

  • Starchess See detailed rule descriptions, piece movements and play this variant on Omnichess

hexagonal, chess, group, chess, variants, played, boards, composed, hexagon, cells, best, known, gliński, variant, played, symmetric, cell, hexagonal, board, gliński, hexagonal, chess, launched, 1949, became, popular, eastern, europe, reaching, half, million, . Hexagonal chess is a group of chess variants played on boards composed of hexagon cells The best known is Glinski s variant played on a symmetric 91 cell hexagonal board Glinski s hexagonal chess launched in 1949 became popular in Eastern Europe reaching half a million fans Three cell colours and three bishops per side are the norm for hexagonal variants Since each hexagonal cell not on a board edge has six neighbor cells there is increased mobility for pieces compared to a standard orthogonal chessboard E g a rook has six natural directions for movement instead of four Three colours are typically used so that no two neighboring cells are the same colour and a colour restricted game piece such as the orthodox chess bishop usually comes in sets of three per player in order to maintain the game s balance Many different shapes and sizes of hexagon based boards are used by variants The nature of the game is also affected by the 30 orientation of the board s cells the board can be horizontally Wellisch s de Vasa s Brusky s or vertically Glinski s Shafran s McCooey s oriented E g when the sides of hexagonal cells face the players pawns typically have one straightforward move direction If a variant s gameboard has cell vertices facing the players pawns typically have two oblique forward move directions The possibility of a hexagon based board with three fold rotational symmetry has also resulted in a number of three player variants The first applications of chess on hexagonal boards probably occurred mid 19th century but two early examples did not include checkmate as the winning objective More chess like games for hexagon based boards started appearing regularly at the beginning of the 20th century Hexagon celled gameboards have grown in use for strategy games generally for example they are popularly used in modern wargaming Contents 1 Glinski s hexagonal chess 1 1 Rules 1 2 Observations 1 3 Timeline 2 Shafran s hexagonal chess 3 De Vasa s hexagonal chess 3 1 Pawn s move 4 Brusky s hexagonal chess 4 1 Pawn s move 4 2 Endgame studies 5 McCooey s hexagonal chess 5 1 Pawn s move 5 2 Endgame studies 6 Starchess 7 Other hexagonal variants 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksGlinski s hexagonal chess EditGlinski s hexagonal chess invented by Wladyslaw Glinski in 1936 and first launched in Britain in 1949 is probably the most widely played of the hexagonal chess games 1 The game was popular in Eastern Europe especially in Glinski s native Poland At one point there were more than half a million players and more than 130 000 board sets were sold 2 Glinski s book Rules of Hexagonal Chess was published in 1973 3 Rules Edit The rules are the same as those of orthodox chess except as follows The game is played on a vertically oriented regular hexagonal board with sides 6 cells long which has 91 hex cells having three colours light dark and mid tone with the middle cell or hex usually mid tone 4 The usual set of chess pieces is increased by one bishop and one pawn The board has 11 files marked by letters a l letter j is not used and 11 numbered ranks which bend 60 at file f Ranks 1 6 each contain 11 cells rank 7 filled with black pawns in the initial setup has 9 cells rank 8 has 7 and so on Rank 11 contains exactly one cell f11 Rook moves Bishop moves Queen moves King moves Knight moves Pawn moves captures marked with crosses promotion cells for White marked with stars The moves of the pieces are as follows The rook may move any number of cells orthogonally traveling through cell edges The bishop may move any number of cells diagonally traveling through cell vertices The queen may move any number of cells orthogonally or diagonally The king may move one cell orthogonally or diagonally There is no castling The knight may move two cells orthogonally in one direction and then one cell orthogonally at a 60 angle jumping over intervening pieces Equivalently the knight may move to any nearest cell not on an orthogonal or diagonal line on which it stands The pawn may move one vacant cell vertically forward If it stands on its starting cell or on the starting cell of any other pawn of its color then it is also allowed to move two vacant cells vertically forward It may capture one cell orthogonally forward at a 60 angle to the vertical including capturing en passant This capturing move is not diagonal unlike in orthodox chess It is promoted when it reaches the end of any file In the pawn diagram if the pawn on e4 were to capture a black piece on f5 then the pawn would retain the option to move to f7 If the black pawn on c7 in the diagram moves to c5 in a single move the white pawn on b5 can capture it en passant bxc6 Stalemate is not a draw in Glinski s chess but it is still counted as less than checkmate in tournament games the player who delivers stalemate earns 3 4 point and the stalemated player the player without a legal move receives 1 4 point A numeric or international notation exists Every detail is exactly as in ICCF numeric notation except that there is no castling Observations Edit Unlike in orthodox chess a king and two knights can mate a king A knight can triangulate A player s three bishops relegated to different colours can never defend each other In the initial setup the white pawn on f5 cannot make a double step to f7 which is occupied by a black pawn however the double step move could be possible later if f7 becomes empty Timeline Edit 1976 June First Hexagonal Chess Congress at Bloomsbury Centre Hotel London which included the inauguration of the British Hexagonal Chess Federation and the first British Hexagonal Chess Championship David Springgay took the title Deceased 12 2 18 December First issue of Hex Press Hexagonal Chess News published 1977 Hexagonal Chess was topic for many newspapers and magazines in Poland and other Eastern European countries December Second British Championship held at Clifton Ford Hotel London Brian Rippon took the title 1978 January Inventor visited Poland Successful Hexagonal Chess event staged Wide publicity in Eastern Europe Wspolna Sprawa produced and distributed over 90 000 inexpensive sets in 18 months September First International Team Match Poland vs Great Britain at Central Hall Westminster London Event shown on BBC and Australian TV reported in press at home and abroad including Japan 1979 July Third British Championship held at Polish Cultural Institute London Title taken by Simon Triggs nearly 16 years old August Return International Team Match Poland vs Great Britain in Warsaw Sponsored by magazine Horyzonty Techniki which includes a regular column on Hexagonal Chess Whilst in Poland Simon Triggs played the first mixed 6 square and 6 hexagonal boards simultaneous display Hexagonal Chess clubs formed in Poland Czechoslovakia and USSR 1980 August International Congress at Polish Cultural Institute London which included Inauguration of International Hexagonal Chess Federation First European Championship Team Match Poland v Great Britain Countries taking part Austria Great Britain Hungary and Poland Event covered by BBC TV and newspapers at home and abroad including USSR Komsomolskaya Pravda 10 500 000 circulation Austria and Hungary Also radio in USA First four places 1 Marek Mackowiak Poland 2 Laszlo Rudolf Hungary 3 Jan Borawski Poland 4 Piers Shepperson Great Britain 1981 September First Hungarian Hexagonal Chess Championship in Szekszard Title taken by Laszlo Sziraki Fourth British Championship held at Woodford Bridge Essex Local and National press coverage including picture in The Times Four players tied for first place Final playoff arranged for October October Playoff held in association with the North London square board Congress when Simon Triggs retained his title 1982 April Second Hungarian Championship held in Miscolc Laszlo Rudolf became the Hungarian Champion for 1982 June Final agreement and arrangements completed with Bohemia in West Germany regarding production of a new complete Hexagonal Chess boxed game with roll up double sided board hexagonal square and wooden pieces to be distributed in the West European market July An open Hexagonal Chess Tournament was held on 10 and 11 July in the famous Sokolniki Park in Moscow Players from Moscow and elsewhere in the USSR took part in the competition First place and the Moscow Trophy were taken by F Goncharov Second was S Seryubin and Third V Goltyapin Judging from the reports received this tournament has considerably accelerated the development and popularity of Hex Chess in the USSR Further tournaments including international team matches over the board and correspondence are being organized Open International Tournament held in Pecs Hungary 24 31 July This tournament was organized by the President of the Hungarian Hexagonal Chess Association Mihaly Gelencser and sponsored by the Zsolnay porcelain factory in Pecs which also donated the Zsolnay Cup as well as other prizes of porcelain figures The winner of the Tournament was Laszlo Rudolf Hungary Second place was taken by Simon Triggs Great Britain September Fifth British Championship held in London Simon Triggs 19 of Garston Hertfordshire won the title of British Hexagaonal Chess Champion for the third time in succession Press Association attended and wrote lengthy background All the quality newspapers took photographs LBC Radio and BBC Radio London broadcast interviews Shafran s hexagonal chess Edit Shafran s hexagonal chess starting position Invented by Soviet geologist Isaak Grigorevich Shafran in 1939 and registered in 1956 It was demonstrated at the Worldwide Chess Exhibition in Leipzig in 1960 The board is shaped as an irregular hexagon with nine files and ten ranks comprising 70 cells as opposed to 91 in Glinski s board The files are labelled a to i the oblique ranks running diagonally from 10 to 4 o clock are numbered 1 to 10 For example see diagram the two kings start on e1 and e10 White s rooks start on a1 and i5 and Black s rooks start on a6 and i10 Each player calls the left hand side of the board his queen s flank and the right hand side his bishops flank note that they do not correlate White s queen s flank is Black s bishops flank All pieces except pawns and kings move and capture exactly as in Glinski s chess In Shafran s chess a pawn s first move can take it to the middle of the file So the d e and f pawns can make a three step initial move the b c g and h pawns can make a double step initially and the a and i pawns can advance only one step A pawn captures diagonally like a bishop but one step away one rank and one file When a pawn makes a multi step move it is subject to being captured en passant Castling and en passant capture In the diagram the black pawn on d8 has three possible moves but none is safe after 1 d7 it can be captured 2 exd7 after 1 d6 it can be captured 2 exd7 e p or 2 cxd6 after 1 d5 it can be captured en passant by either pawn Kings move as in Glinski s chess except that castling is permitted in Shafran s chess unlike Glinski s or McCooey s The usual restrictions apply It can be long or short castling in either direction The notation consists of Q or B indicating whether the queen s or the bishops rook is used followed by 0 0 0 long castling the king moves next to the rook and the rook jumps over it or 0 0 short castling the king moves one cell less distance In the diagram the black king on h10 has castled long queenside 1 Q 0 0 0 and the black king on c8 has castled short bishopside 1 B 0 0 Castling does not typically increase the king s safety or make the rook more active but it is present in the game nonetheless for completeness Stalemate is a draw in Shafran s chess De Vasa s hexagonal chess Edit De Vasa s hexagonal chess starting position This array of pieces on the players first ranks was first proposed by de Vasa 5 Invented by Helge E de Vasa in 1953 and first published in Joseph Boyer s Nouveaux Jeux d Echecs Non orthodoxes Paris 1954 The rhombus shaped board comprises 81 cells with initial setup as shown in the revised form of the game Rules for piece movement are the same as Glinski s variant except for the pawns Castling is permitted and kings start on opposite wings of the board 6 7 Players may castle either short 0 0 or long 0 0 0 The king slides two cells when castling short three cells when castling long Other standard chess castling rules and restrictions apply Pawn s move Edit Pawns start on the players third ranks A pawn moves forward to an adjacent cell or as its first move option two cells forward in the same direction A pawn captures diagonally forward to the sides to a cell of the same colour on which the pawn stands The white pawn on b3 since it has not yet moved has four move options green dots and two ways to capture red dots The white pawn on g5 has moved from its initial cell so has two move options and two ways to capture If Black moves his f7 pawn to either f6 or f5 White can capture it for example 1 f7 f5 2 g5xf6 e p In the diagram White has castled short 0 0 and Black has castled long 0 0 0 Brusky s hexagonal chess Edit Brusky s hexagonal chess starting position The first rank piece array was first proposed by Helge E de Vasa see De Vasa s hexagonal chess Invented by Yakov Brusky in 1966 The game features an irregular hexagon board comprising 84 cells Piece movement rules are the same as Glinski s chess except for the pawns of which there are ten instead of Glinski s nine Other differences from Glinski s castling is permitted kings start on opposite wings of the board and draws are worth half a point 8 9 Players may castle either short 0 0 or long 0 0 0 The king slides two cells when castling short three cells when castling long Normal castling rules and restrictions apply As in algebraic notation each cell is identified by a letter number combination Ranks are horizontal and identified by numbers 1 8 files are straight and 30 oblique to the vertical identified by letters a l Moves can be recorded in long algebraic notation LAN to avoid confusion for example 1 d2 f4 rather than 1 df4 Pawn s move Edit A pawn moves forward to an adjacent cell or as its first move option two cells forward in the same direction If an enemy man blocks a pawn from moving in one of its two forward move directions then that pawn is automatically blocked from moving in the other direction as well But if the blocking man is a friendly piece the effect is not the same the pawn is still free to move in the unblocked direction The white pawn on c2 since it has not yet moved has four move options green dots and three ways to capture red dots The white pawn on i3 has moved from its initial cell so has two move options and two ways to capture The white pawn on g5 and black pawn on h6 block each other from any forward moves But if Black moves his f7 pawn to either f6 or f5 White can capture it for example 1 f7 f5 2 g5xf6 e p A pawn captures diagonally forward to a cell of the same colour on which the pawn stands But only a pawn on its initial cell may capture straight forward once a pawn has moved it may capture only to the sides So unless it is a wing pawn an unmoved pawn has three capturing possibilities a pawn that has moved two En passant captures are permitted in Brusky s chess Endgame studies Edit These endgame studies apply to Brusky s hexagonal variant king rook can checkmate a lone king king two knights can checkmate a lone king king two bishops can checkmate a lone king king bishop knight can checkmate a lone king McCooey s hexagonal chess Edit McCooey s hexagonal chess starting position In 1978 79 Dave McCooey and Richard Honeycutt developed another variation of hexagonal chess very similar to Glinski s having four differences the starting array including seven pawns per side instead of nine the pawn s capturing move pawns on the f file are not permitted an initial double step and stalemate is counted as a draw players receive half a point 10 Pawn s move Edit This diagram shows the pawn s move in McCooey s variant The capturing move corresponds to a bishop s move e g if the black pawn on e8 advances to e6 the white pawn on d5 may capture it en passant The pawn s move In the starting position the f file pawns may not advance two steps like the other pawns The f pawns are also not defended in the opening array and in fact smothered mate would result if it were captured by a knight although this possibility would rarely occur in practical play Endgame studies Edit These endgame studies apply to both Glinski s and McCooey s variants 11 king two knights can checkmate a lone king king rook beats king knight no fortress draws and a negligible number 0 0019 of perpetual check draws king rook beats king bishop no fortress draws and no perpetual check draws king two bishops cannot checkmate a lone king except for some very rare positions 0 17 king knight bishop cannot checkmate a lone king except for some very rare positions 0 5 king queen does not beat king rook 4 3 of the positions are perpetual check draws and 37 2 are fortress draws king rook can checkmate a lone king Starchess Edit Starchess one possible starting position Pawn moves King moves Knight moves Rook moves Bishop moves Queen movesStarchess is a hexagonal variant invented by Hungarian chess teacher Laszlo Polgar 12 The board is a horizontally oriented regular hexagram consisting of 37 numbered cells Due to the small board games typically finish quicker than in standard chess 12 Each player has five pawns a king knight bishop rook and queen The white pawns start at cells 5 12 18 23 and 29 the black pawns at 9 15 20 26 and 33 At the beginning of the game the players place their other pieces alternately on the cells behind their pawns White 4 11 17 22 28 Black 10 16 21 27 34 As a consequence there are 5 14400 possible setups Pawns move one step vertically forward and capture one step orthogonally left forward or right forward and have an initial double step option identical to Glinski s pawn there is no en passant capture The promotion zone for white pawns consists of Black s back rank cells 10 16 21 27 and 34 and for black pawns White s back rank cells 4 11 17 22 and 28 A pawn that has lost its initial double step option by making a capture is called a limping pawn a pawn that ended up on cells 2 3 35 or 36 is called a dead pawn a pawn on cells 1 or 37 is called a mummy The king moves one step in any orthogonal direction there is no castling The knight jumps two steps in any orthogonal direction followed by one step in a different direction identical to Glinski s knight The rook can move any number of steps but only vertically the bishop can move any number of steps but not vertically The queen combines the moves of the rook and the bishop and thus can move any number of steps in any orthogonal direction identical to Glinski s rook Other hexagonal variants EditThe first published hexagonal chess variant was the commercial game Hexagonia 13 14 invented in 1864 by John Jaques amp Son The board has 127 cells each side has 1 king 2 cannons 4 knights and 8 pawns The winning objective is not checkmate but rather to safely bring one s king to the central board cell Siegmund Wellisch published a three player Wellisch s hexagonal chess variant in 1912 The board is a regular hexagon with sides of length 6 which consists of 91 cells however it is oriented horizontally Each side has eight pawns three knights two rooks one queen and one king There are no bishops The pawn moves and attacks one step in one of two orthogonally forward directions there is no initial double step nor en passant capture The king moves one step in any orthogonal direction The knight jumps one step in any diagonal direction and is thus colour bound The rook moves any number of steps in one of six orthogonal directions The queen combines the moves of a rook and a knight Castling involves the king and a rook simply swapping places 15 McCooey also developed a variant called Mini Hexchess which uses a vertically oriented regular hexagon with sides of length 4 which consists of 37 hexes Each player has a king a knight a bishop a rook and five pawns Mathewson s hexagonal chess uses nine McCooey s pawns which are set up at b1 c2 d2 e3 f4 g3 h2 i2 and k1 for White Black s are mirrored For everything else it is identical to Glinski s REX chess was invented in 1997 by Arnaldo Rodrigues D Almeida It is played on a horizontally oriented rectangular shaped board which consists of 85 hexes Kings move one step in any orthogonal direction pawns move and attack one step orthogonally forward two directions all other pieces behave as in Glinski s Setup is similar to de Vasa s except that each side has 15 pawns ten on the second rank and five on the third 16 In 1998 Derick Peterson invented Grand Hexachess This variant uses a regular hexagon with sides of length 7 which consists of 127 hexes the board is oriented horizontally with each player s pieces on opposite sides Pawns then have two possible forward moves forward left and forward right and three possible diagonal capturing moves one directly in front Precisely this was the motivation for this design considering the fact that usually the hexagonal chess pawn is the only piece that does not increase its mobility 17 Chexs is a multiplayer variant the version for two and three players uses a regular hexagon with sides of length 6 which consists of 91 cells the four six player version uses a regular hexagon with sides of length 9 which has 217 cells pieces move as in Glinski s but the setup is different each player starts with only two bishops and all bishops are on same coloured cells A checkmated player is defeated the player who gave checkmate takes over control of the pieces of the defeated player the winner is the player who has checkmated all his opponents 18 Echexs uses the same boards as Chexs the same moves as Glinski s but McCooey s setup 19 C escacs 2007 is a Grand Glinski chess the board is shaped as a regular hexagon with sides of length 8 which consists of 169 cells In addition to the Glinski s setup it introduces a dragon empress a rook knight compound two pegasi princesses bishop knight compound and two almogavars a 2 0 and 1 1 leaper compound i e it can jump either to the second square in any orthogonal direction or move one step diagonally Pawns moves are increased to allow forward 60 moves i e they now have three move directions instead of one and captures are the same way McCooey s chess i e they capture diagonally forward two options The scornful pawn capture additional rule counterbalances the excessive pawn mobility 20 See also EditCross Chess with extra pieces on a hexagonal board with cross shaped cells Hexshogi a shogi variant played on a board with 85 hexagonal cells Masonic Chess with tiled squares and features similar to de Vasa s variant Sannin shogi a three player shogi variant on a hexagonal board Troy a fairy chess variant on a hexagonal boardReferences Edit Pritchard 2007 p 203 Pritchard 1994 p 139 Hooper amp Whyld 1996 hexagonal chess p 172 Wladyslow Glinski Rules of Hexagonal Chess ISBN 0 904195 00 7 Jelliss G P July December 1992 New Varieties of Hexagonal Chess Variant Chess Vol 1 no 8 British Chess Variants Society pp 97 112 ISSN 0958 8248 Pritchard 1994 pp 141 42 Pritchard 2007 pp 209 10 Pritchard 1994 pp 142 43 Pritchard 2007 p 210 McCooey s Hexagonal Chess by Dave McCooey Endgame analysis for Hexagonal Chess by Dave McCooey a b Polgar Starchess Pritchard 1994 p 143 Pritchard 2007 p 297 Wellisch s hexagonal chess REX Peterson Derick 1998 02 10 Derick Peterson s Grand Hexachess The Chess Variant Pages Chexs Echexs C escacs Bibliography Hooper David Whyld Kenneth 1996 First pub 1992 Hexagonal Chess The Oxford Companion to Chess 2nd ed Oxford University Press p 172 ISBN 0 19 280049 3 Pritchard D B 1994 Hexagonal Chess The Encyclopedia of Chess Variants Games amp Puzzles Publications pp 138 43 ISBN 0 9524142 0 1 Pritchard D B 2007 22 Boards based on hexagons In Beasley John ed The Classified Encyclopedia of Chess Variants John Beasley pp 203 12 ISBN 978 0 9555168 0 1 Further reading EditPritchard D B 1982 Hexagonal Chess Brain Games Penguin Books Ltd pp 90 97 ISBN 0 14 005682 3 External links Edite2 e4 a bilingual comment on having three kinds of bishops Chess for three which summarily describes Wellisch three player chess and dozens of other three player chess variants triangular hexagonal quadrilateral and others Green Chess is a free online chess portal where you can play the Glinski McCooey Shafran Brusky and de Vasa variations in a turn by turn manner 91 cell hexagonal chessboard a printable diagram of a 91 cell hexagonal chessboardGlinski variant Glinski s Hexagonal Chess by Hans Bodlaender The Chess Variant Pages Rules Russian page translated to English via Alta Vista Archived 2020 11 27 at the Wayback Machine Scatha a free GUI and engine for Mac OS which plays Glinski s hexagonal chess Hexagonal Chess 1936 at BoardGameGeek Glinski s Hexagonal Chess a simple program by Ed Friedlander Java Glinski s Hexagonal Chess See detailed rule descriptions piece movements and play this variant on OmnichessMcCooey variant Hexagonal Chess by Dave McCooey The Chess Variant Pages McCooey s Hexagonal Chess a simple program by Ed Friedlander Java Shafran variant Hexagonal Chess by I G Shafran by Ivan Derzhanski Shafran s Hexagonal Chess a simple program by Ed Friedlander Java Brusky variant Brusky s Hexagonal Chess a simple program by Ed Friedlander Java Starchess variant Starchess See detailed rule descriptions piece movements and play this variant on Omnichess Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hexagonal chess amp oldid 1134085129, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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