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Passed Pawns, Scorpions and Dragon. More Falcon Chess Variants.[All Comments] [Add Comment or Rating]
Jared McComb wrote on Sat, Jul 19, 2003 11:15 AM UTC:Good ★★★★
It seems to me that the Scorpion and Dragon are pretty clumsy, always
having a fixed large range.  Aren't they a little too difficult to use
well?

--Jared

💡📝George Duke wrote on Tue, Jun 22, 2004 04:31 PM UTC:
Games that previously use advanced Pawns systematically in starting array are Patt-Schach, Upside-Down Chess, and thirdly French Revolution Chess. I think the arrays here in Passed Pawns Chess are unique with piece and pawn adjacency centrally.

💡📝George Duke wrote on Wed, Aug 6, 2008 05:25 PM UTC:
There are 6 or 10 definitions of Falcon move around, all describing the same three-step three-way darter. (That's one incomplete definition right there.) Falcon is mathematical complement to Rook, Knight and Bishop, of which there can be only one. The particular definition in this article at the start of section ''Scorpion'' reads: ''Falcon slides three squares to reach squares leaped to by Zebra and Camel. Falcon follows any of six patterns OOD, ODO, DOO, DDO, DOD, and ODD, where 'O' is orthogonal (one square rook-like or straight, rectilinear) and 'D' is diagonal (one square bishop-like or oblique, slant). Falcon does not jump like Camel or Zebra and so must have a clear path.'' A good definition is offered 27.June.2008 Comment at ''Falcon Chess'' year 1999 essay, also never revised: that the Falcon moves to squares at opposite corners of (2,4) and (3,4) along ''any of the three shortest paths to its destination consisting or orthogonal and diagonal steps, which can be blocked on any square it has to pass over to reach its destination.'' The term ''shortest path,'' or as minimal pathway, is used before and always benefits from fuller explanation. For example, related Scorpion, four-step versus Falcon three-step, reaches squares at opposite corner of (2,5), (3,5) and (4,5). Among Scorpion's pathways are odod and dodo, entailing two changes of direction. They are ''short-path'' routes just as ddoo and oodd, all travelling same distances. It just helps to spell out all fourteen of the patterns within the Scorpion's definition.

💡📝George Duke wrote on Wed, Aug 6, 2008 05:49 PM UTC:
An error occurs in this article never revised because of being before self-posts. Scorpion is four-way to its (2,5) and (4,5) squares, and six-way to its (3,5) squares. [''(3,5)'' is used to mean opposite corner of 3x5 rectangle from a starting square.] Dragon is in fact five-way to its (2,6) and (5,6) squares, and ten-way to (3,6) and (4,6) squares. All of course are required five steps for Dragon. Also Buffalo (Knight+Camel+Zebra) should be Bison (Camel+Zebra).

💡📝George Duke wrote on Tue, Nov 25, 2008 12:51 AM UTC:
Here's one real zigger and zagger, optionally. It takes two to zigzag. 12-year-old Dragon five-stepping has such moves in the same general direction as orthogonal-diagonal-orthogonal-diagonal-orthogonal, doodo, oddod, dodod and so on. See text where it can be read the old-fashioned way. Dragon to her various squares is six-, five-, or four-way, I believe. Truthfully, they have to be recounted each time when it gets to Dragon, Phoenix (six-stepping), Roc, described in comments with Abdul-Rahman Sibahi. What goes around comes around.

💡📝George Duke wrote on Fri, Jun 19, 2009 07:34 PM UTC:
Here is the treatment multi-path out to Dragon. Falcon, Scorpion and Dragon. Then Phoenix and Roc.

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