Wolf Chess

The wolf, fox, and elephant represent formidable compound pieces in Wolf Chess.

Wolf Chess is a chess variant invented by Dr. Arno von Wilpert in 1943.[1][2] It is played on a 10×8 chessboard and employs several fairy pieces including wolf and fox – compound pieces popular in variants and known by different names.

Wolf Chess correspondence matches and tournaments have been held, one of which (Paris vs. Augsburg, September 1960) is claimed to be the first international over-the-board match for a chess variant (Pritchard 1994:343).

Game rules

Wolf Chess gameboard and starting position. For this diagram: nightriders are represented by inverted knights; sergeants are represented by inverted pawns. Wolves start on square g1 (for White) and b10 (for Black); foxes start on f1 (White) and c10 (Black).

As in standard chess, White moves first and the winning objective is checkmate. The king, queen, rook, bishops, and pawns move and capture the same as they do in chess. In addition there are some special rules.

Special rules

References

Notes

  1. Pritchard does not mention promoting to knight, but Bodlaender does.
  2. Bodlaender defines the Wolf Chess elephant as Q+nightrider; Pritchard defines as Q+N.

Citations

Bibliography

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, August 24, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.