Google AI, re: Is chess itself the best chess variant, up to 2025?

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  • Google AI, re: Is chess itself the best chess variant, up to 2025?

    Google's AI generated answer to: Is chess itself the best chess variant invented up to 2025?:

    is chess itself the best chess variant invented up to 2025 - Google Search
    Anything that can go wrong will go wrong.
    Murphy's law, by Edward A. Murphy Jr., USAF, Aerospace Engineer

  • #2
    Chess as it is must be close to perfect at minimum. The only change I have wondered about is this. Perhaps we should only be allowed to promote to a piece that has already been captured. This would be more in keeping with chess as a metaphor for war. It would certainly change the game because if a player still had the queen they would sacrifice it before promoting.

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    • #3
      Originally posted by Brad Thomson View Post
      Chess as it is must be close to perfect at minimum. The only change I have wondered about is this. Perhaps we should only be allowed to promote to a piece that has already been captured. This would be more in keeping with chess as a metaphor for war. It would certainly change the game because if a player still had the queen they would sacrifice it before promoting.
      Promoting to only a piece that has already been captured is a type of rule that's been used many times by chess variant inventors, at least in the case of more modern day variants that I've seen over a number of years (that is, variants that I've seen on the chessvariants dot com site, alone).

      As late as the 19th century, the pawn promotion rules for chess itself were finalized, in that it was debated whether it should be allowed for a pawn to be moved to the eighth rank, and still remain as a pawn, even though it clearly would have no legal moves available to it after that point. One composed position demonstrated that the result of a game might differ if a pawn could be left as a pawn, upon reaching the eighth rank, but in spite of that it became an established part of the basic rules of chess that a pawn must promote to a piece.
      Anything that can go wrong will go wrong.
      Murphy's law, by Edward A. Murphy Jr., USAF, Aerospace Engineer

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