Three-dimensional chess
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Mate in 4 By Udo Marks. Solution here. |
Three-dimensional chess, or 3D chess, are examples of chess variants. Three-dimensional variants have existed since the late 19th century. One of the oldest versions is Raumschach (German for "Space chess"), invented in 1907 by Ferdinand Maack and played on a 5x5x5 board. Maack founded a Raumschach club in Hamburg in 1919, which remained active until the Second World War.
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[edit] Raumschach
The 3-D board is actually a cube sliced into 5 equal spaces across each of its three major coordinal planes. This sectioning yields a 125-cell playing volume.
Each floor is marked with a capital letter, A, B, C, D or E. Ranks and files are as in Chess. So, the kings start on Ac1 and Ec5. White starts on the A level (the ground floor) and black starts on the roof.
Rooks, bishops, and knights move as they do in Chess in any given plane. Rooks, for example, move through the walls of the cubes in any rank, file, or column. Bishops move along the edges of the cubes, and knights move one cube rookwise followed by one bishopwise move. Unicorns move through the vertices of the cube, each of the two can only reach 30 cubes. The queen combines the moves of rooks, bishops, and unicorns. The king moves just like a queen but one step at a time. Pawns move in two directions, forward like a Chess pawn, and may move one step upward (if white) or downward (if black) and capture diagonally upward (or downward). Promotion occurs where pawns can't move any more, that is the rank E5 for white pawns and A1 for black pawns. There is no double move, en passant nor castling.
[edit] Tri-Dimensional Chess
Probably the most familiar 3D chess variant to the general public in the early 21st century is the game of Tri-Dimensional Chess (Tri-D Chess), which can be seen in many Star Trek TV episodes and movies, starting with the original series and proceeding in updated forms throughout the subsequent movies and spinoff series.
The original Star Trek prop was assembled using boards from 3-D Checkers and 3-D Tic Tac Toe games available in stores at the time (also visible being played in the original series episodes) and adding futuristic chess pieces. Rules for the game were never invented within the series; in fact, the boards are sometimes not even aligned consistently from one shot to the next within a single episode. The Tri-D chessboard set was made popular by its inclusion in the The Star Trek Star Fleet Technical Manual by Franz Joseph, who invented starting positions for the playing pieces and short additional rules. The complete Standard Rules of this game were originally developed in 1976 by Andrew Bartmess (with approval from Joseph), and he has subsequently expanded and fine-tuned them.
There also is a Creative Commons-licensed manual written in Italian by Marco Bresciani, which presents a complete and faithful translation of the latest version of Bartmess' Standard Rules, with instructions on how to build a chessboard and many other things. This manual is available through the Star Trek Italian Club (for members only, see external links, below). Marco Bresciani also made a software project as an Information Technology Laurea Degree final thesis, that allows playing Tri-D Chess with Bartmess' Standard Rules full support. There are various computer applications for playing Tri-D Chess.
A set of tournament rules for Tri-Dimensional Chess written by Jens Meder is available on his website, However, Meder's rules are based on FIDE's Rules more than Andrew Bartmess's Standard Rules, with some deviations too.
[edit] Other variants
Another variant of 3D chess is that simulated by the 3dchess program for GNU/Linux. This variant is played on three standard 8×8 boards, stacked vertically. The middle board features the standard pieces, while the following new pieces populate the other two boards:
- Prince (King)
- Princess (Queen)
- Abbey (Bishop)
- Cannon (Knight)
- Galley (Rook)
The movements of various pieces have been modified to allow them to move across boards (for example the Cannon must move three spaces in one direction, two in a perpendicular direction and one in the remaining perpendicular).
This version was developed and produced in a plastic board game format by Mind Games Manufacturing Limited, a company incorporated in Ireland in 1992. Although about 2,000 copies were manufactured, the company closed after a year and a half.
A variant possibly similar to Star Trek 's Tri-Dimensional Chess is seen in Legend of the Galactic Heroes, a Japanese science fiction novel. Another SF 3D chess game is Cheops or Pyramid chess, mentioned in the Dune novels of Frank Herbert, which has the object of simultaneously placing one's opponent in checkmate and one's own Queen at the apex of the pyramidal board.
Isaac Asimov's science fiction short story "A Perfect Fit" refers to a 3D chess game which is effectively eight chessboards stacked upon each other, making the playing area cubic rather than square (that is, exactly one dimension more than ordinary 2D chess).
A highly specialized three-dimensional chess variant is Gary Gygax's dragon chess.
Millennium 3D Chess™ is a similar 3D chess variant which is also played on three standard 8 by 8 chess boards (3x8x8). Millennium 3D Chess™ rules were written with the objective of extending the traditional chess game into a multilevel environment without distorting the basic game. To this end, Millennium 3D Chess™ has not "created" new chess rules, but instead extended the traditional rules to allow for multiboard play. Other than the concept of moving between chess boards (levels), all traditional two (2D) chess rules apply. A free PDF copy of the rules can be downloaded from Millennium 3D Chess™ Rules.
[edit] Trivia
In episode 19 of Batman ("The Purr-fect Crime") millionaire Bruce Wayne and his young ward, Dick Grayson, are seen with a chess game consisting of four complete boards and four complete sets of pieces stacked vertically. Wayne says that the game is quite rudimentary, while Grayson expresses his trepidation by exclaiming "Holy Reshevsky!"
[edit] External links
[edit] Raumschach
- Raumschach by Bruce Balden and Hans L. Bodlaender.
- 3D chess Problems by Udo Marks, Germany
- 3D Chess FAQ File, by David Moeser
[edit] Star Trek three-dimensional chess
- Tri-Dimensional Chess Rules – Standard Rules by Andrew Bartmess
- 3-D Chess Site of Jens Meder – in English; Tri-D Chess rules, boards and more
- Scacchi Tridimensionali – The primary reference for the Italian Tri-D Chess manual; the website also includes game software²
- Parmen – Free Tri-D Chess for Windows, from HempTrek (supports standard and tournament rulesets according to posted sample games)
¹The manual is written in Italian and fully based on Bartmess' Standard Rules. It is Creative Commons-licensed but available to Star Trek Italian Club members only: see above links.
²This Tri-D Chess game has been completed but available for testing and debugging purposes to Java programming language programmers only.
[edit] Other variants of three-dimensional chess
- Millennium 3D Chess™ – A 3x8x8 variant of 3D chess by William L. D'Agostino
- 3D Chess Board – by Dan Beyer
- 3-D Chess Games | Chess Variant Pages – By Peter Aronson, Hans Bodlaender, and David Howe (eds.) et al.
- 3dchess – open-source 3D chess for X11, with Debian package
- Chess: The Next Generation* – By Paul Glover; rules, diagrams, pictures (* no relation to ST:TNG, and thence, neither to Tri-D Chess)