Check out Glinski's Hexagonal Chess, our featured variant for May, 2024.

This page is written by the game's inventor, Florin Lupusoru.

Sorry, King!

This game started as a joke but soon I realised its potential. 

At first, I tried to mix Monopoly with Chess and I didn't like it. Then I remembered a funny game I used to play as a child. This game is a variation of the Sorry game improved by a German inventor who called it: "Man, don't get mad!"  This game quickly became very popular in Europe and around the world under various names such as: "Man, don't get angry!", "Sorry to bother you!", "Sorry, my brother!" etc.

People might remember that this game was packed together with the game of Chess, advertised as "bringing adulthood and childhood together!". 

Once I decided on the setup, the hardest thing was to find a proper name. 

Setup

The initial setup looks like this.

Two parallel games are played simultaneously, a game of Chess, and a variation of Sorry, also known as "Man, don't get mad!"

Pieces

Each player has a complete set of Chess pieces and seven checkers, or pegs. The chess pieces follow the standard setup, while the checker pieces are placed on a red square and enter the game one at a time.  

Each set of pieces will only move in their own territory: the chess pieces in the 8x8 central square, while the checker pieces will move around the 8x8 chess board in an anticlockwise direction starting from their own red square. The checker pieces have to make a complete tour of the board. Their movement is not decided by a dice, but by the value of the last chess piece moved. 

Players take turns making one chess move, and one checker move, in this order. The values of a chess piece will decide how many squares a checker piece will move.

Piece values vs number of squares

Pawn = 1

Knight = 2

Bishop = 3

Rook = 4

Queen = 5

King = 6

Players will get an extra point if the checker piece that is to be moved stands on a row/column in which that player has superiority. 

The superiority of a row/column is determined by adding together the value all chess pieces of the same colour. In this case, the standard chess values are used.

Pawn = 1

Knight = 3

Bishop = 3

Rook = 5

Queen = 9

King = 10

Checker pieces, when captured by other checker pieces, will move to the starting position. If that square is already occupied they will enter the game on the next turn. 

Rules

Two games are played simultaneously and they influence one another. 

Chess pieces decide how many squares checker pieces will move.

Checker pieces determine de colour of the chess pieces on the row/column they control. Controlling a row/column means that two checker pieces, of the same or different colour, have to be on the oposite ends of that row/column. 

Here we have three different outcomes:

Example diagram for all three situations: 

Explanation:



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By Florin Lupusoru.

Last revised by Florin Lupusoru.


Web page created: 2024-02-20. Web page last updated: 2024-03-22

Revisions of MSsorry,-king!