Checkless chess
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Checkless chess or prohibition chess is a chess variant where giving check is forbidden unless it is checkmate. All other rules are as in regular chess.
Variations[edit]
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Some variations in the rules of checkless chess exist:
- In a situation where the player is not in check and all possible moves deliver check without being checkmate, the player might be considered either to be stalemated or to lose.
- A checking move might be considered either to be legal only if it would be a checkmate in orthodox chess or to deliver checkmate if any response would be a cross-check.
Observations[edit]
The rule change of checkless chess has a profound impact on the way the game is played. In checkless chess, the king is immune to most attacks as long as it avoids being checkmated. Checks cannot be used to gain time or chase the king to an unsafe position. In addition, mating patterns are generally significantly more difficult to execute.
Another effect of this rule is that the king, immune from attack, is now itself a powerful force. The king can defend pieces by placing itself so that capturing the piece would place the king in check. The king can advance into the enemy position, creating havoc in the enemy camp as enemy pieces need to avoid moving to squares where they would put the king under check. However, such a plan may be risky since getting the king trapped in the enemy camp may subject it to an untimely checkmate.
References[edit]
- Entry on "Checkless chess" in Hooper, David; Whyld, Ken (1984). Oxford Companion to Chess. ISBN 0-19-217540-8.
External links[edit]
- Checkless chess by Hans Bodlaender.