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'''CubicShogi''' is the shogi variant invented by Vladimír Pribylinec beginning with an early version (named Echos) in 1977.
The first way of the author was Cubic chess and
later CubicShogi. The game substitutes cubes for the chess pieces, where the six faces of each cube display a different chess piece (pawn, knight, bishop, rook, queen, and king). This provides an efficient means (rotating the cube on a square) to change a piece's type.. Although shogi yet failed to establish themselves in the larger community of players in Western countries, the East is playing more than million people. Its levels are nearly matches the classical chess, but at the cost of some handicaps: slow during the first half of the game, the quest for dragon units that act as "Terminator" with sudden twists in the game, heavier focus on the playing field for the names of(reminiscent of hieroglyphics) for playing the same colored men, complex units promotion and advancement of the loss of exclusion from the board (classic chess is no such meditative). Major tenet of CubicShogi is simplification without no radical changes while maintaining good gameplay. Playing board with 8x8x8 or 8x9 named Heian šogi is only shogi variant to it is Cubicshogi a little similar.The others variants are either larger or smaller - any from they have new units, any are without drops.

Contents: 1 Game rules 2 Promotion 3 See also 4 References 5 External links

'''Game rules'''

Instead of classical figures are used cubes to each side separately symbol of the king, rook, bishop, knight and pawn. Current value of dice determines the symbol on its upper side. The game is on the board with a 8x8 array. The last two rows (for 7th and 8th of white, black for 1 and 2) represent the promotion zone.

Basic position: White Kd1 Gc1 Ge1 Rg2 Bb2 Bf1 Nb1 Ng1, pawns on the whole 3th row Black: Ke8 Gd8 Gf8 Rb7 Bc8 BG7 Nb8 Ng8, pawns on the whole 6th row

Mobility figures: King of the one square in each direction, General as the king laid back than action. Rook of the columns and rows Bishop along the diagonals Knight forward two squares to the adjacent column - it can jump other men , it has an extension to moving horizontal for a one square Pawn one square forward, it captures the same way it moves.

Captured men are stored in the stack, in which to start the game 2 white and 2 black pawns. The pawn and the knight, after entering the promotion zone instantly transform to a General turning the dice, the Bishop changes into Rook - from the stack these figures do not support the zone. Gateway unit before saving it to stack exchanges symbol on the upper side of the opposite color pawn in the stack. When the tray is not a pawn for the promotion zone, the unit is eliminated from the game. The player whose turn it is, it can either move on the chessboard unit or any units of his color in the stack to drop on any vacant square. The column must not be more than a pawn of one color or two pawns with an opposite colour orientated by contrary direction. For chess, checkmate and draw the same conditions as in classical chess. Wins a player, who checkmates of the opponent.

'''Promotion''' A player's promotion zone consists of the two farthest ranks, at the original line of the opponent's pawns and beyond (that is, the opponent's territory at setup). If a piece crosses the board within the promotion zone, then that player immediately promote the piece at the end of the turn. Each piece promotes as follows: A king or the general cannot promote, nor can pieces which are already promoted. A pawn or knight , when promoted, loses its normal movement and gains the movement of the general. A bishop promotes to rook.
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'''King''' Range: The rook can step one square in any direction, orthogonal or diagonal.

○ ○ ○
○ K ○
○ ○ ○

'''Rook'''''' Range: The rook can move any number of free squares along any of the four orthogonal directions. The rook does not promote.

─ ─ R ─ ─

'''Bishop''' Range: The bishop can move any number of free squares along any of the four diagonal directions. Because it cannot move orthogonally, an unpromoted bishop can only reach half the squares on the board. A bishop that reaches the zone of promotion changes to rook. \ /

\ /
\ /
B
/ \
/ \
'''General''' Step: The general can step one square in one of the four orthogonal directions; or,one square diagonally forward, giving it six possibilities.

○ ○ ○
○ G ○
The general does not promote.

'''Knight'''Step: The knight jumps at an angle intermediate between orthogonal and diagonal, amounting to one square forward plus one square diagonally forward, in a single motion, ignoring any intervening piece. That is, it has a choice of two forward destinations, in Cubishogi has an extension one square horizontally Step: The pawn can step one square forward. A knight that reaches the farthest rank must promote.

☆ ☆
☆ N ☆
'''Pawn''' Tokin Step: The pawn can step one square forward. A pawn that reaches the zone of promotion changes to general. On one column must not stand two pawn of the same color or opponent pawn.

P
Check and mate' When a player makes a move such that the opponent's king or crown prince could be captured on the following move, the move is said to give check to the king; the king is said to be in check. If a player's king is in check and no legal move by that player will get the king out of check, the checking move is also mate, and can effectively win the game. A player is not allowed to give perpetual check. [edit]Game end In practice this rarely happens, as a player will resign when checkmated, as otherwise when loss is inevitable. There are two other possible (but fairly uncommon) ways for a game to end: repetition and impasse. If the same position occurs three times with the same player to play, then the game is no contest. (Recall, however, the prohibition against perpetual check.) The game reaches an impasse if either kings or crown princes have advanced into their respective promotion zones and neither player can hope to mate the other or to gain any further material.

'''See also'''

Crazyhouse Shogi variants

'''References'''

Pritchard, D. B. (2007). "Cubic Chess [Pribylinec]". The Classified Encyclopedia of Chess Variants. John Beasley. pp. 162–63. ISBN 978-0-9555168-0-1.

'''External links'''

Official website

www.cubiccheckers.com

Revision as of 07:19, 7 July 2012