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Our Featured Variant: Try the Chinese game of Xiangqi, one of the most popular and enduring Chess variants in the world.
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This game was first described in J'Adoube, a chess newsletter from Cincinnatti, in 1974, by David Moeser.
The rules are a variation on the rules of orthodox chess - with the inspiration for the rule change derived from the rules of checkers. (Unpromoted pieces can only move forward in checkers; promoted pieces can in addition also move backwards.)
Borrowing some rules of Draughts (a game, related to Checkers, played in a large part of Europe), pieces can now move only in forward direction, but they may capture backwards. Reaching the last row transforms the piece to a normal piece.
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Created on: August 19, 1997. Last modified on: September 29, 2001.
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Last modified: Monday, December 22, 2008