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George Duke wrote on Mon, Dec 21, 2009 04:18 PM UTC:
Happy Solstice.  Score: Mastodon > Unicorn Great > Big Board > Centennial > Eurasian > Black Ghost > Eight-Stone > Templar > Modern > Courier de la Dama > Switching > Seirawan.  Responsive to discussion, Big Board like all of them is inclusive of its variants broadly interpreted, each one easily 100s of variants keeping its core intact. Also, correction: to any picayune, Modern and Courier de la Dama are reversed per original intent.
The Stones are not Mutator so much as extraneous elements or maybe what
Gilman was just investigating ''non-pieces'' or quasi-pieces. 
http://www.chessvariants.org/large.dir/contest/eightstones.html
http://www.chessvariants.org/index/displaycomment.php?commentid=24303
Representative Eight-Stone poses: what can be done in Next Chess medium by
way of externalities? Lavieri's Promoter; Betza's Black Ghost -- that we did just call a mutator;
Thompson's Trampoline; Aikin's Stones. Eight-Stone is the chosen example
of thorough monkey-wrenching, spanners in the works. Actually though as
much a novelty CV as Rococo, the Eight-stone would excel whenas
systematizing Track Two CVs, as one of just a few present nominees really belonging on that
interface Track One/Track Two. The Stones block, period, and never
disappear, as players move them and move pieces. Playground tactics. Why not? Did Aikin test them on still larger boards? If Stones were to number one only, is not that approximately the Black Ghost of 1997 uncaught and uncapturable instead? Stones are like multiple Ghosts of indifferent colour. Like the Shirley MacLaine-Sellers oldie, Stones and Black Ghost tell of ''Being There,'' or having been, as in ''been there done that.'' The way to place Eight-Stone is ask, how much more research is warranted? For NextChess, hard-to-classify Eight-Stone belongs right there with Black Ghost, Betza's taking priority in the decremental ladder of imperfection.
''In 1772 a committee, of which Lavoisier was member, was appointed by the French Academy, to investigate a report that a stone had fallen from the sky at Luce, France. The falling of large stones from the sky, without any assignable cause of their previous ascent...'' --Fort, 'Book of the Damned' 1919

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