Query Results for
SELECT * FROM `Item` LEFT JOIN `IndexEntry` USING (ItemID) WHERE `Type` = 'Game' AND FIND_IN_SET(:'2d',`Categories`) AND FIND_IN_SET(:'Small',`Categories`) AND `IsHidden` = 0 AND `Item`.`IsDeleted` = 0 AND `Language` = 'English' ORDER BY `LinkText`, `Item`.`Summary` ASC LIMIT 500 OFFSET 0
- 4-Player Pothole Chess. Bulldozers and cars and other vehicles are pieces in 4-player chess variant. (7x7, Cells: 39)
- 6 Ranks, remaining variants. Extrapolations from the Diana/Los Alamos/Haynie's Primary family of variants. (6x6)
- Action Man's Chess. A small (5x6) board and simple pieces ensures lots of easy-to-understand action. (5x6, Cells: 30)
- Afterlife Chess. A game based on Ancient Egyption mythology, played on four boards totaling 42 squares. (Cells: 42)
- Alapo. Game with abstract pieces. Reach opponents first row on 6 by 6 board. (6x6, Cells: 36)
- Amoeba. Small variant with 38 movable squares. (7x7, Cells: 38)
- Amphora. Chess variant inspired by game of Stone Warriors on wine bottle shaped board with 40 squares. (Cells: 40)
- An-Qi. Played on the squares of half a Xiangqi board but using all the pieces. (8x4, Cells: 32)
- Apocalypse. Small variant of knights and pawns; objective is to take all pawns.
- Arena Chess 42. A non-competing entry in the 42 Squares contest. (Cells: 42)
- Arnhem Chess. Game on board of 38 squares. (6x7, Cells: 38)
- Ascension. 6x6 board with two Kings that promote to royal Queens.
- Asteryx Chess. Hexagonal chess played on an asterisk-shaped board. (Cells: 43)
- Bachelor Chess. Win by mating your opponent, or marrying off your King. (7x6, Cells: 42)
- Bachelor Nimrod. Small variant with one each of distinctive Nimrod pieces, and of Knight. (6x6, Cells: 36)
- Battery Chess. Chess on a Battery shaped board, with lots of batteries. (5x10, Cells: 46)
- Ben 39. Pieces move on squares and corners of board with 37 fixed and two movable squares. (Cells: 39)
- Beryl Chess. Variant on board of 39 triangles. (Cells: 39)
- Bingo Chess. A cross between Chess and Bingo. (Cells: 41)
- Biparite Chess. Small chess variant with two phases. (5x7, Cells: 43)
- Bird Shogi. Tori Shogi, or Bird Shogi. A variant of Japanese Chess on a 7 by 7 board. (7x7, Cells: 49)
- Black Holes. On 5 by 8 board with holes as pieces which also can be used for transport. (5x8, Cells: 40)
- Blind Chess. Played on the squares of half a Xiangqi board but using all the pieces. (8x4, Cells: 32)
- Border Wars. Game played on the 42 edges of a grid, with elements of Shogi and XiangQi. (Cells: 42)
- Border Wars II. Game played on line edges with Shogi-like aspects. (Cells: 44)
- Borderline. Without pawns, with only one king, capturing opponent's pieces is omitted. (7x7, Cells: 49)
- Bottleneck Chess. Most pieces start the game locked up in two bottleneck parts of the board. (Cells: 41)
- The Bridge 41. 41 square board with bridge in the middle. (5x9, Cells: 41)
- Bushi shogi. Shogi variant on a two-square board! Bushi means Samurai.
- By Rook Or by Crook. Chess in the round on a hexagonal board with 42 trapezoidal squares. (Cells: 42)
- Caïssa. On a 7 by 7 board with disappearing squares. (7x7, Cells: 49)
- Caliph Qi. Extension of Isis with compound colourbound pieces and overlapping royal-accessible areas. (6x9)
- Cannons and Crabs. A variant on a 7x6 board with Crabs (improved Pawns), and Cannons (leapers). (7x6, Cells: 42)
- Canyon Chess. Small variant with Marshalls and Archbishops and some new rules. (8x8, Cells: 44)
- Capture the Flag Chess. A translation of the classic children's game to a 42-square board. (7x6, Cells: 42)
- Cascudo. On 44-square hexagonal board with turns consisting of cascade of moves. (Cells: 44)
- Central Point Chess. Small 7x7 game with different pieces.
- Chameleon. Chess variant on board of 41 colored squares, where pieces change type depending on color of square the move to. (7x7, Cells: 41)
- Chameleon Chess. Each player has a King and 11 Chameleons whose moves are determined by the type of square they are on. (6x7, Cells: 42)
- Chess - The Speed Game. Chess on a 5 by 6 board. (5x6, Cells: 30)
- Chess in the Fast Lane. The 64-squares of a regular Chess board are grouped into 41 "regions" producing a small board that looks full size. (8x8, Cells: 41)
- Chess on a board with 37 squares. Game with full Chess arrays minus a Pawn on a 37 square board without any corners. (Cells: 37)
- Chess on a Soccer Ball. Missing description (Cells: 32)
- Chess with Different Periods. Missing description (6x6, Cells: 36)
- Chess37. A chess variant on a board with 37 squares where pieces outside of the center 9 squares move like Kings. (Cells: 37)
- Chesscala. Missing description (6x8, Cells: 48)
- Chessence. Variant on a 9 x 6 board with 8 missing squares, immobile Kings, and 9 pieces whose movement depends on their spatial relation. (6x9, Cells: 46)
- Chessence. Small variant with many possible winning conditions.
- Chestria. Each player has 11 randomly selected pieces in this game of placement and flipping. (3x(5x5), Cells: 43)
- Chipps. Let all pieces gain a chip by moving to the other side of 4 by 8 board. (4x8, Cells: 32)
- Chogo44. Game with pawns and kings with co-enclosure capture. (7x8, Cells: 44)
- Chromopolis. `Almost' colorbound pieces on a cylindrical board of 40 squares. (7x6, Cells: 40)
- Clash of Command. Chesslike game with pieces that change and leave behind other pieces on special board. (Cells: 41)
- Color Chess. Chess variant on board with 39 squares with five different colors. (6x6, Cells: 36)
- Combination Chess. Pieces give their movement capabilities to friendly pieces in their zone of influence. (Cells: 39)
- Compact Hex Chess. 2 normal hex armies on a board reduced to sides of length 5. (9x9, Cells: 61)
- Congo. Animals fight on 7 by 7 board. (7x7, Cells: 49)
- Convergent Chess. Attack king directly or move to its home square on board with 40 squares. (6x6, Cells: 40)
- Courtyard. Variant on 5 by 8 board. (5x8, Cells: 40)
- Crazy 38's. On strange board with 38 squares. (Cells: 38) (Recognized!)
- Cube+. Three dimensional chess variant with 38 squares. (3x(3x4), Cells: 38)
- Cycle Chess. Variant on a board with 39 cells, three of which are special. (6x6, Cells: 39)
- Dagger Chess. Hexagonal variant on board with 39 squares. (Cells: 39)
- Danadazo. Game played on the 47 edges of a grid with rounded corners, borrowing elements from Tafl. (Cells: 47)
- Dart Chess. Chess on a 6x6 board with a new piece: the Dart. (6x6, Cells: 36)
- Dave's Example Game. This is Dave Howe's example of a user-posted game. (2x2, Cells: 4)
- Demi chess. Chess on a 4 by 8 board. (4x8, Cells: 32)
- Diamond Chess. Chess variant on diamond shaped board with 40 squares. (Cells: 40)
- Diana. Chess on a 6 by 6 board. (6x6, Cells: 36)
- Diminuendo Chess. Hexagonal variant: captured pieces are dropped in the center and diminished, not removed. (7x8, Cells: 43)
- Dino-Czars. Battle between rival dinosaurs on a board of 42 triangles, where facing counts. (Cells: 42)
- Diplomat Chess. Round-board variant with a Diplomat to suborn opponents. (Cells: 43)
- Do-or-die Chazz. Pawns that can move backward and kings only on 5 by 8 board. (8x5, Cells: 40)
- Do-or-die Chess. Chess on an 8-by-5 board. Three ranks have been removed. (8x5, Cells: 40)
- Dobutsu Shogi. The smallest Shogi variant made for kids to learn Shogi. (3x4, Cells: 12)
- Dodl-schach. A truly small variant. (6x4, Cells: 24)
- Dragonfly. Drop pieces you have taken on a 7 by 7 board. (7x7, Cells: 49)
- Dream Chess 46. 46-squasre variant played from opposite corners of a FIDE board with the other corners removed. (8x8, Cells: 46)
- Dream Chess 47. 47-square variant played from opposite corners of a 7 by 7 board with the other corners removed. (7x7, Cells: 47)
- Duel Chess. Captured pieces are sent to a separate Duel board to see who is eliminated and who returns. (2x(5x7), Cells: 43)
- Dueling Archbishops. Chess variant on 2 by 3 board. (2x3, Cells: 6)
- Elena Chess. Chess on 5 by 6 board. (5x6, Cells: 30)
- Epsilon Eridani. 44-square version of Achernar. (9x5, Cells: 44)
- Equestrian Chess. On diamond shaped board with reentry squares and different pieces. (Cells: 41)
- Eric's 40-square Fiasco!. Game on 5 by 8 board with three pieces that start in reserve. (5x8, Cells: 40)
- Espionage chess. Spy can only be captured in turn after it has moved in 41-square variant. (7x7, Cells: 41)
- Etcetera. This variant has some elements of Chinese Chess. Also, pieces cannot capture pieces of their own type. (7x8, Cells: 56)
- Evolution Chess. 42-square game where each player starts with 20 Knights that evolve and a King. (7x6, Cells: 42)
- Extended Half-chess. Variant on 4 by 10 board. (4x10, Cells: 40)
- Family matters chess (small). Variant on 41 square board. (Cells: 41)
- Fanorona Chess. Variant played on a Fanorona board with capture by approach and by withdrawal. (5x9, Cells: 45)
- Fault Line. Fault Line. (8x6, Cells: 40)
- Feeble Los Alamos Chess. Los Alamos Chess using Feeble pieces. (6x6, Cells: 36)
- Five-Minute Poppy Shogi. Small shogi variant on a 4 by 5 board. (4x5, Cells: 20)
- Fleap. Pieces move as equihoppers, but become FIDE pieces after being captured. (5x9, Cells: 43)
- Flip Chess and Flip Shogi. Pieces have two sides with different movements on board of 38 squares. (7x6, Cells: 38) (Recognized!)
- FlipFlop. A minimalistic Chess-like game with only one type of piece.
- Flipping Xiangqi. Hybrid of Xiangqi & Kyoto Shogi – flip the pieces after each turn. (7x7, Cells: 49)
- Four File Chess. Variant on 4 by 10 board. (4x10, Cells: 40)
- Free corners chess. In the corners of seven by seven board, three squares form together one field. (7x7, Cells: 41)
- Fusion Diamond 41. A Fusion Chess variant played on a diamond shaped board of 41 squares. (Cells: 41)
- Gnu. Simple game featuring the Gnu as promotee. (5x10, Cells: 50)
- Goal Box Chess. Game on 42 squares with no King and the goal of placing pieces into 2 special squares. (5x8, Cells: 42)
- Goatsuckers. Small modern shogi variant on 5 by 5 board. (5x5, Cells: 25)
- Gufuu Shogi . Tiny variant on a 2x3 board with four pieces.
- Guschess. Pieces can freely move in one of 38 areas on the board. (8x8, Cells: 38)
- Hajiku Shogi. Inspired by Shogi and Chu Shogi. Pieces can both promote and demote in promotion zone.
- Half Chess. On a 4 by 8 board without pawns. (4x8, Cells: 32)
- Half Courier. A Pawnless variant rearranging a slightly simplified Courier back rank onto two ranks. (6x8, Cells: 48)
- Half Shogi and Half Xiang Qi. Applying the principles of Half Chess to Oriental games. (5x9, Cells: 45)
- Halloween Knight Court. Halloween-themed variant on a tiny board. (3x3, Cells: 9)
- Hans 38Special Chess. On a board with 38 squares. (6x6, Cells: 38)
- Hans 40 Gift Chess. Pieces are digits or letters and move like their form on 5 by 8 board. (5x8, Cells: 40)
- Hans37 Chess. Chess variant for four players on a board of 37 squares. (Cells: 37)
- Hans38 Chess. Eric Greenwood's chess on a board with 38 squares. (6x6, Cells: 38)
- Hans38 Chess. A form of Chess with a Limited Supply of Squares; entry of the 38-challenge. (8x8, Cells: 38)
- Haynie's Primary Chess. On 6 by 6 board without knights. (6x6, Cells: 36)
- Heaven. Pieces trying to reach a goalfield can only move if in reach of a friendly piece. (Cells: 39)
- Herd. Experimental variant with jumping pieces on 7 by 7 board. (7x7, Cells: 49)
- Hex Shogi 41. Hexagonal shogivariant on board with 41 squares. (Cells: 41)
- Hex39. Hexagonal chess variant on small board with simple rules. (Cells: 39)
- Hexapawn. Martin Gardner's miniature game of three pawns vs the pawns. (3x3, Cells: 9)
- Hexes Chess . Link: Hexagonal Chess in 54 hexes, using orthodox pieces. Includes enhanced Pawn movement and castling. The board is elongated.&.
- Hexes Compressed Chess . Link: This version of Hexagonal Chess has rotated cells so that the angles point up and down.
- Hexetera. Small hexagonal variant with some elements of Chinese Chess. (Cells: 44)
- Hibryd I. Game played on 4x4 board with a King and four Pawns each, neutral pieces, multiple forms of capture and many ways of winning. (4x4, Cells: 16)
- Hibryd III. An exotic three-player variant played on a board of 42 hexes with multiple victory conditions. (Cells: 42)
- Hippodrome. Solitaire game using a small board. (4x4, Cells: 16)
- Hitchhiker Chess. Get your Hitchhiker to the Restaurant at the other End of the Board; inspired by Douglas Adams' books. (Cells: 42)
- Hole Chess. Variant on a board of 44 squares with two holes that pieces can be dragged into. (7x10, Cells: 44)
- Holywar. Variant with 6 by 6 board with four additional corner squares. (6x6, Cells: 40)
- Hopgi. Small-board variant of Chessgi with an L-shaped board, linked pairs of Kings, where all pieces can move like a Mao-hoppers. (7x7, Cells: 43)
- Horus. Game with Royal Falcons where all pieces start off board and most captures return pieces to owner's hand. (7x7, Cells: 44)
- Hourglass Chess. 38-Square board in shape of Hourglass. (7x6, Cells: 38)
- HP-minichess. Small chess variant that could be played against a pocket calculator. (5x5, Cells: 25)
- Infantry Chess. Small chess variant with short range pieces. (9x9, Cells: 43)
- Inside-out chess. With two kings per player and squares with a square inside. (6x6, Cells: 44)
- Interdependent Chess. A 42 square variant in which pieces borrow capturing ability from other pieces. (6x7, Cells: 42)
- Isis and Cam. Two variants based on ancient English universities and the rivers near them. (6x8, Cells: 48)
- Judkin's Shogi. Small shogi variant on 6 by 6 board. (6x6, Cells: 36)
- Kaos: The Game . Multiplayer game on a 7x7 board.
- Keltic Chess. Adapted orthochess on a 43-square, fidchell-inspired board. (9x7, Cells: 43)
- King and Queen. Variant on cross-shaped board with 39 squares. (Cells: 39)
- Kings and Pawns. Proprietary game on 8 by 7 board with two types of pieces and no capturing. (7x8, Cells: 56)
- KingSwap!. A solitaire swap puzzle to escort your lazy King. (5x5, Cells: 25)
- Kinzoku. Small variant for little ones, is based on Dobutsu but is very different from it. (3x5, Cells: 15)
- Knight Court. Mate the knight with three pieces per player on a three by three board. (3x3, Cells: 9)
- Knight-Tac-Toe. Small variant with only kings and knights where you must get three pieces in line in the center of the board. (5x5, Cells: 25)
- Knightsbridge. 14 knights against 14 knights on a 7 by 7 board. (7x7, Cells: 49)
- Kozeriai. A 5x7 variant of Shogi. (5x7, Cells: 35)
- Krieg. Two player game on a four-by-four board. Article. (4x4, Cells: 16)
- Kylatori Sunset. Small variant combining replacement, custodian and coordination capture. (6x8, Cells: 48)
- Kyoto Shogi. Modern 5x5 Shogi variant where pieces promote and unpromote with every move.
- L Shaped Chess. 2 player variant with some elements of 4-player ones. (7x7, Cells: 45)
- Ladder Chess. Chess variant on a `skewed' board with 40 squares. (Cells: 40)
- The Last Mourning. On board with 38 squares and Jesters. (Cells: 38)
- Leap Chess. Game with mandatory captures and other Checkers-like elements on a board of 44 squares. (6x8, Cells: 44)
- Lecce's Chess. semi-chess with a big army. (4x8, Cells: 32)
- Letter Chess. Pieces are a diagram that shows a letter and their movement capabilities. (7x7, Cells: 49)
- Life, the Universe and Everything. 42-square double-move variant with unusual pieces, inspired by Douglas Adams' fiction. (6x7, Cells: 42)
- Limited Square Chess. A form of Chess with a Limited Supply of Squares; entry of the 38-challenge. (8x8, Cells: 38)
- Limiting Chess. On a 4x8 board, with the objective of capturing all the opponent's pieces. (8x4, Cells: 32)
- Litrof. Variant on 42 squares played with stacks of Icehouse pyramids, where different color pyramids give stacks different powers. (5x8, Cells: 42)
- Little Dragon Chess. Modern small variant of Xiangqi on board of 41 squares. (5x7, Cells: 41)
- Little Trio. Small variant combining Chess, Shogi, and Xiang-Qi. (7x7, Cells: 49)
- Loonybird. Pieces on a seven by seven board move differently when they take. (7x7, Cells: 49)
- Los Alamos Extinction Chess With Bunkers. On 6 by 6 board with two additional 2 by 2 bunkers, and extension chess rules. (2x(6x6), Cells: 44)
- Los Alamos variant. Chess on a 6 by 6 board from the early days of computing. (6x6, Cells: 36) (Recognized!)
- Lotus-39. Chess variant on special shaped board with 39 squares. (Cells: 39)
- Magician Chess. Variant on 7 by 7 board with nine holes and magician able to move holes. (7x7, Cells: 40)
- Med Chess. Diagonal board game with a mix of traditional, modern and Shogi pieces. (8x8, Cells: 44)
- Mercurial Chess. A variant on 42 squares with a satallite board and the rescue of captured pieces. (6x6, Cells: 42)
- Microshogi. Small shogi variant on a 4 by 5 board. (4x5, Cells: 20)
- Mini Burmese Chess. Small variant of Burmese Chess. (6x6, Cells: 40)
- Mini four player chess. Missing description (8x8, Cells: 48)
- Mini HexChess. Small hexagonal chess variant. (Cells: 37)
- Mini Slanted Escalator Chess. Chess on smaller asymmetric board. (8x6, Cells: 44)
- Mini Thunder Chess. A small-scale hybrid of Metamorph Chess, Fusion Chess, and Assimilation Chess. (6x7, Cells: 42)
- Minima. johnnyluken. (6x6, Cells: 64)
- Minishogi. On a 5 by 5 board. (5x5, Cells: 25) (Recognized!)
- Minishogi setuper. Minishogi you can set up pieces at beginning of the game. (5x5, Cells: 25)
- Minixiang. Xiang Qi's short-range pieces come into their own on a small board. (5x6, Cells: 30)
- MiniXiangqi. S. Kusumoto's MiniXiangqi - Chinese Chess on a 7x7 board (with zrf).
- More10. Chessvariant on a board with 10 squares. (2x5, Cells: 10)
- Motorotor. Variant where two platforms slowly orbit a central board. (11x11, Cells: 43)
- Mulligan Stew Chess. 42-Square Swapping-Mage Teleporting-Assassin Dual-Color-Bound-King Limited-Double-Move Leaping-Pawn Chess. (6x7, Cells: 42)
- My38 Chess. Variant on board with 38 squares. (Cells: 38)
- Nana-Shogi. Shogi variant on a tiny board.
- Narnia Chess. Chess played on both the outside and inside of a soccer ball. (Cells: 52)
- Narrow Chess. Variant on 2 by 20 board. (2x20, Cells: 40)
- Neighbors. Try to capture the most pieces on a 42-square board completely filled with neutral pieces. (7x6, Cells: 42)
- Neutron 45. Variant of the game Neutron on a 45-squared board. (7x7, Cells: 45)
- Not a chess variant. Rules of a chess variant on a board with 41 squares. (7x7, Cells: 41)
- Notchess. A family of games with Chess and Chess-Variant pieces but no King. ()
- Oblique. Variant with board with 40 squares turned 45 degrees. (Cells: 40)
- Oblong Chess 44. Variant of Oblong Chess on board with 44 squares. (4x11, Cells: 44)
- Once More, with Deans. Subvariants of River-with-university-and-cathedral series with extra piece type.
- The One Ring. White wants to get the Ring to the far side and destroy it. (5x8, Cells: 42)
- Onitama. Cards decide how pieces move, perfect information with no chance beyond setup.
- Outer Space Chess. Space-themed game with hyperspace and regular space boards. (2x(5x8), Cells: 43)
- Pachessi. Race and chess game on board formed by removing 3 by 3 square from center of 7 by 7 square. (7x7, Cells: 40)
- Palace Revolution. Variant on 44 square board with Templar Knights and Squire Pawns. (7x8, Cells: 44)
- Panal: a hexagonal chess. A double-royal piece variant on a 61-hex board. (Cells: 61)
- Patricia. On a 5 by 5 board, with drops and changing pieces. (5x5, Cells: 25)
- Pawn Less Chess. New pieces, no pawns, and 20 squares removed from the 8 by 8 board. (8x8, Cells: 44)
- Peng Hu rules. Rules for half-board Xiangqi. (8x4, Cells: 32)
- Penthouse. Game like Chess and Makruk but on the half of chessboard with drops and full chess set used. (4x8, Cells: 32)
- Petty Chess. Chess on a 5 by 6 board. (5x6, Cells: 30)
- Philosophers Chess. Chess variant on two small boards with usual and `philosophical' pieces. (6x6, Cells: 40)
- Pink Panther Chess. Possess the Pink Panther diamond give your piece extra moves. (7x7, Cells: 49)
- Pirate Chess. Two or three pirates fight on a board with 39 triangles. (Cells: 39)
- PiRaTeKnIcS. Pirates on ships fight each other in 44-squares chess variant. (6x8, Cells: 44)
- Pirates-Henge-Ho. Small variant with pirates theme. (5x7, Cells: 38)
- Pocket Polypiece Chess 43. Game with off-board pocket where all pieces of a type change when one piece of a type is moved normally. (7x6, Cells: 43)
- Pompeii Chess. Variant on board with 25 squares. (7x7, Cells: 25)
- Power Chess 1998. Taken pieces can reenter. (5x7, Cells: 39)
- Prisoner's Escape. Free your Prisoner by getting it to an unattacked square -- a small board version of Anticheckmate Chess. (7x8, Cells: 44)
- Puzzle Shatranj. Shatranj on a 15 puzzle. (8x8, Cells: 60)
- Quad-Square Chess. Chess on a board of 38 squares, of which six have size two by two. (7x8, Cells: 38)
- Quake Chess. Earthquakes over the board. (8x6, Cells: 46)
- Quarterboard. Small variant with no pawns and piece drops, inspired by Chess and Shogi.
- Quick Chess. Chess on a 5 by 6 board. (5x6, Cells: 30)
- Re. Drop pieces on a 5 by 5 board. (5x5, Cells: 25)
- Reality check. Remember the opposite site of flippable pieces. (Cells: 39)
- Reenterent Chess. There is one additional square where taken pieces can wait to reenter 5 by 8 main area. (5x8, Cells: 41)
- Regulator Chess. Game on a 35 square board with a 7 square track on which a piece moves that determines how Knights and Bishops can move. (6x7, Cells: 42)
- Robber-Baron. Which of the seven robbers is the robber-baron? (7x7, Cells: 39)
- Rollerball. Chess race fight on board formed by removing 3 by 3 square from center of 7 by 7 square. (7x7, Cells: 40)
- Rook Mania. Game where all pieces have different sorts of Rook-like moves. (7x7, Cells: 43)
- The Royal Standard. Pieces can only move when near a standard-bearer piece on board with 38 squares. (7x6, Cells: 38)
- Sankaku Shogi. Small Shogi variant played on a board of 44 triangles with no drops and a teleporting Emperor. (7x8, Cells: 44)
- Semedo. Missing description (5x8, Cells: 40)
- SerPent Chess 50. Pentagonal cells form hexagonal blocks in two ways. (Cells: 50)
- Shakti. On a 7 by 7 board with disappearing squares. (7x7, Cells: 49)
- Shifting Sands Chess. Special squares -- which can be dropped and moved -- change the types of pieces that land on them. (6x7, Cells: 42)
- Shogi 59. Shogi on half of a 9x12 board. (9x13, Cells: 59)
- Sideways Hourglass chess. Small variant on 6 by 7 board with two squares punched out. (7x6, Cells: 40)
- Sigma 4 Shogi. Missing description (7x7, Cells: 49)
- A Silly 42-Squares Board. A Silly 42-squares board with a little Unirexial variant you can play on it. (Cells: 42)
- Slide-Chess. Variant on 44 squares with moving cages. (7x8, Cells: 44)
- Small Spherical Chess. Board of form of sphere, with 38 squares. (Cells: 38)
- Small-Deacon Chess. Missing description (7x7, Cells: 49)
- Smallest possible 2D and 3D chess. Missing description (2x(2x2), Cells: 4)
- Smegi. Arrows on squares show where pieces can go - crossover between Smess and Shogi. (5x8, Cells: 40)
- Snake Chess. A variant played on a 2 by 12 cyclindrical board. (2x12, Cells: 24)
- Snark Hunt. Variant with unequal armies on board with 41 squares, inspired by a poem of Lewis Carroll's. (6x8, Cells: 41)
- SpaceWarp44. 44 square board has warp squares that allow a teleport to another warpsquare. (5x9, Cells: 44)
- Spartan Chess 28. Missing description (4x7, Cells: 28)
- spIndecision Beryl. Two players fight with three armies on board formed by 39 triangles. (Cells: 39)
- Subway Chess. In a turn, player moves first middle subway part of board and then a piece. (7x7, Cells: 41)
- Suicide Chess. http://www.windowsphone.com/en-us/store/app/suicide-chess-free/b89dc1a3-2d23-410d-b580-aaaff54d81f5.
- Symmetron! 44. Most pieces move orthogonally or diagonally according to situation. (7x6, Cells: 44)
- Take Over Chess. Jump across pieces to take them over from your opponent. (7x7, Cells: 41)
- Tapestry Chess. Chess on a four-color 6x6 board, with a 5 square control board. (6x6, Cells: 41)
- Test Minichess. Chess on a 6x6 board. (6x6, Cells: 36)
- Thirty-Nine Squares Chess. Variant on board with 39 squares with special drop and promotion rules. (Cells: 39)
- Thronschach. A game on 42-squares with throne squares, and an interesting mix of pieces. (5x8, Cells: 42)
- Tishai. Played on a 7x7 board with 2 sideboards. (7x7, Cells: 49)
- Tori Shogi. Tori Shogi, or Bird Shogi. A variant of Japanese Chess on a 7 by 7 board. (7x7, Cells: 49)
- Tori Shogi. A variant of Japanese Chess on a 7 by 7 board. (Link to Roger Hare's shogi site.).
- Toto40. Staircase board with fighting line in the middle, inspired by Totolospi game of Hopi Indians. (Cells: 40)
- Toystore Chess. A problem-like Chess variant on a 5x5 board with free placement. (5x5, Cells: 25)
- Traffic Jam. Pieces try to reach other side of narrow board. (14x3, Cells: 40)
- Triana. 3-player version of 6x6 games. (9x9, Cells: 54)
- Trissa. A Rococo-inspired hexagonal variant for three players with an unusual flavor. (10x10, Cells: 55)
- Trubix. Chess variant on board with 41 squares. (Cells: 41)
- Trubix-43. Unique piece and lines of movement on an hourglass board. (5x11, Cells: 43)
- Two Pipe Chess. Setup on 41-squares board looks like two tobacco pipes. (9x5, Cells: 41)
- Voidrider Chess. A 43 square variant with movable spaces. (7x9, Cells: 43)
- The Weak Square of the Jumping King. Kings start jumping around, dropping the other pieces on a board with 38 squares. (6x6, Cells: 38)
- Whale Shogi. Shogi variant. (6x6, Cells: 36)
- Wild Jokers. 7 by 7 board with 8 pits and various pieces, including jokers that can make successive jumps across pits. (7x7, Cells: 41)
- Wiz-42. Game on 42-squares with Wizards that can make multiple moves when connected. (5x8, Cells: 42)
- Wormhole Xiang Qi. A small Xiang Qi variant with 2 special spaces. (7x7, Cells: 47)
- Xiangqi 42. A minature version of Xiangqi (Chinese Chess) on 42 squares. (7x6, Cells: 42)
- Ziggurat. Mesopotamian-themed variant on a 43-square board. (13x5, Cells: 43)