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This page is written by the game's inventor, David Cannon.

Dürer's Chess

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Back in 2003, I discovered the unique tiling of pentagons and diamonds first described the the German artist and mathematician Albrecht Dürer in 1525, and thought it would make a great board for a chess-like game. Knowing nothing about Zillions of Games programming at the time, I just jotted down a few basic ideas about piece movements (I thought of the SPIRE and the RINGMASTER at that time), and put the project on the shelf. After learning a little Zillions programming, I returned to the idea in January 2010, incorporating some of my original ideas, along with some borrowed from other variants.

There are four ways to capture pieces: displacement (as in FIDE and many other variants), assimilation (absorbing the powers of captured pieces, as well as friendly pieces through "mergers"), conversion, and sandwiching. See the Rules section for details.

Setup

Pieces

The pieces, except for Pawns, Guards, and the King, are grouped together in two "families". Please see the diagrams illustrating how they move.

Rules

There are four ways to make captures:

1. Displacement - enemy pieces that are not of the same "family" are simply removed from the board, as in FIDE and most other traditional varieties of Chess.

2. Assimilation - a piece may capture both friends and foes of the same "family" and assimilate their powers. The Rook (a sliding piece) may merge with a Ringmaster (also a slider) to form a Princess. It may not merge with, say, a Knight, because the Knight is not a slider.

Note that compound pieces formed this way may be split apart later. In the Zillions implementation, to break a Princess down into its components, simply click your mouse on the cell where you want the Rook-part or the Ringmaster-part to go. That part will move, leaving the other part behind. Fergus Duniho first popularized this method of capture in some of his games in the early 2000s.

3. Conversion - a leaping piece (Knight, Archer, Airman, Sailor, or any compound thereof) may convert an enemy piece to a friendly piece simply by flying over it and landing on the cell beyond. N.B. If the cell beyond is also occupied by an enemy piece, a leaper may make two captures simultaneously. For example, a Knight flying over an enemy Rook and landing on top of an enemy Spire would convert the former and kill the latter, in one move. An Archer flying over an enemy Ringmaster and landing on top of a Knight (either friend or foe) would simultaneously convert the Ringmaster and assimilate the Knight.

4. Sandwiching - Pawns and Guards also convert enemy pieces to friendly pieces, by "sandwiching." An enemy Knight caught between two friendly Pawns, for example, is converted to a friendly Knight. On rare occasions, Pawns and Guards may be able to capture two pieces simultaneously. There are three ways to win:

1. Checkmate.

2. Stalemate - I would like to make this better than a draw, but not quite as good as a checkmate. In tournaments, FIDE awards one point for a checkmate and a half-point to each player for a draw, with stalemate counting as a draw. For this game (and any others that I invent), I would award a half-point for a stalemate - but only to the player forcing the stalemate. I cannot implement this in the Zillions programme, as it does not differentiate between superior and inferior wins, so for the Zillions programme, a stalemate is a win.

3. Converson of the King - given that leaping pieces convert enemy pieces by flying over them, and that Pawns and Guards also convert enemy pieces by sandwiching, it is possible for the King to be converted to an enemy piece (this actually happened once while playtesting this game with Zillions). The player whose King defects to the enemy, of course, loses the game.

Notes

Piece values

Zillions of Games estimates that the pieces have the following values:

Guard - 6448 (0.75 pawns); Pawn - 8522; Archer - 6071 (0.7 pawns); Airman - 19365 (2.3 pawns); Sailor - 8571 (1.0 pawns); Knight - 11481 (1.3 pawns); Spire - 9945 (1.7 pawns); Warlord - 29919 (3.5 pawns); Ringmaster - 35562 (4.1 pawns); Rook - 37657 (4.4 pawns).

Zillions estimates the compound pieces' worth as about 1.8 times the sum of their parts. I personally disagree with this. By way of comparison, the FIDE Queen is worth about 1.2-1.3 times the combined values of its component pieces, the Rook and Bishop. I would therefore expect compound pieces in this game to be worth more than the sum of their parts, but not excessively so. Assigning values to pieces is not an exact science, however; even experts disagree about the relative value of the pieces in FIDE chess, and the value assigned to the Queen by Zillions (7.7 pawns) is less than what most experts estimate.

In this game, I think the Warlord and Knight are much more powerful on pentagons than on diamonds, but the program does not recognize the distinction. The Warlord and Knight are, in my opinion, overvalued on diamonds and undervalued on pentagons (which does affect decisions made when it comes to exchanging pieces).

I also disagree with the Zillions valuing of the Archer less than a Pawn. In terms of passive movement (which I think is the only one that Zillions takes account of), that estimate would be correct. But an Archer can both capture enemy pieces and merge with friendly pieces, assimilating their powers; a Pawn cannot. An Archer can also convert an enemy piece to a friendly piece by flying over it; a Pawn needs to work with another Pawn to "sandwich" an enemy piece to do that. An Archer can make two captures simultaneously; a Pawn cannot. I will continue to explore ways to tweak the piece values.

Despite the inherent subjectivity of Zillions estimates, I think they are good as a rough guide.

Play Dürer's Chess!

I have programmed a Zillions of Games file to play this game. You may download it here. You need the Zillions of Games engine installed to play it.



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By David Cannon.
Web page created: 2010-02-15. Web page last updated: 2010-07-13