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Don't you think it's important to use AltOrthHex, http://www.chessvariants.org/index/msdisplay.php?itemid=MSaltorthwithfur, splitting the six-way into two three-ways as logical development? The underpinning of Gilman's discovery is clarity for humans or other sentients. Units that go six directions are a bit much. Then start to do away with opaque Knights and so on of Glinski and McCooey both. "Logical" is priniciple when Vera and I developed Falcon in the nineties on squares. That is, anything can be made up. Yet Falcon has compelling logic with respect to regular Knight, Bishop and Rook two-fold: each mutually exclusive arrival squares and second each different own unique movement mode. In the end, three-way least-path Falcon is first among four equal simple Chess pieces because it has elements of the other three embedded. But Clarity should be first principle on Hexagons, being slightly difficult to visualize compared to squares; therefore two three-ways. Result is Hexagons have two basic types not four of squares. Then only cautiously add anything not along the six radials, if at all, and jumping along them a la Hutnik is more natural for a couple of subsidiary piece-types than "oblique" Knight/Bishop of McCooey, Glinkski, Gilman, Larry Smith.
I did a blog post on this: http://boardgamegeek.com/blogpost/34884/logical-hex-chess The basic point is that I don't believe that normal attempts at having a chess game on a hex space are logical. I believe, to make sense on a hex board, in order to not have weird knights and bishops that become leapers, pieces are restricted to these core move types: - Move one space adjacent. - Move in a straight line a number of spaces, without changing direction, capturing an enemy piece or being blocked by a friendly piece, or stopping. A piece would be able to move in 6 directions, one per side. - Leaping in a line one or more pieces, ignoring occupied spaces. A piece would leap in one of six directions. Pieces can be formed out of a combination of these move types. Anyhow, I would be interested in discussing this further. Please comment below. I am thinking of working on my own hexagonal chess variant, after observing a Chinese Checkers board (particularly the inside part that isn't the bases), is sufficiently large to support a number of games. Thank you for your time...
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