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Kriegspiel is September's Recognized Chess Variant of the month.

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Contest to design a 10-chess variant

Vote for the finals

Send an email to hansb ... at ... cs.uu.nl listing the finalists, with the best game at position 1. These are the finalists: Congratulations to all who made it, and thanks to all others for participating!

Introduction

The Chess Variant Pages have now existed for ten years! It was in early 1995 that assistent professor of computer science Hans Bodlaender started a small set of webpages with information on a few chess variants. Now, 10 years later, we have a large enthusiastic group of inventors, authors, editors, and players, and two domain names... Time for a celebration! Naturally, this must be celebrated in the manner fitting to this website: with a chess variant design contest!

Here are a few of the other contests held earlier:

This time, the contest is somewhat informal; there will be no prizes, but only honor for the winner.

The challenge

For this contest, there is no specific clear rule; only this: the game invented should be a chess variant, and somehow, the number 10 must play a role in the game. So, you could design a variant on a 10 square board; or on a board of 10 by 10 squares; with 10 different types of pieces; and if you think a little about it, you may have some other more creative ideas how the number 10 can play a role in the variant. So, this is the challenge for this contest:

Design a chess variant in which the number 10 plays a role.

Skip to rules

Competing entries - Main category

  1. 10-directional Chess, by Jörg Knappen.
  2. 10 Minute Melee, by Mason Green.
  3. AtTENdance Chess, by Erez Schatz.
  4. The Bermuda Chess Angle, by Gary K. Gifford.
  5. Caïssa Brittania, by Fergus Duniho.
  6. Camel and Rhino Chess, by Tony Quintanilla.
  7. Capablanca Random Chess, by Reinhard Scharnagl.
  8. Chariots, by David Jagger.
  9. Chess with Batteries, by Roberto Lavieri.
  10. Countdown, by Jared McComb.
  11. d10 Chess, by Bruce Leban.
  12. Decima, by Mike Nelson.
  13. Ecumenical Eurasian Ninjachess, by Charles Gilman.
  14. Eurasian Chess, by Fergus Duniho.
  15. Hexa Decimal, by Joost aan de Brugh.
  16. Ladder Shogi, by Mason Green.
  17. Magi, by Neal Meyer.
  18. Manchala Chess, by Dhruv Manchala.
  19. Monster Bluff Chess, by Dale Holmes.
  20. MORE10, by Roberto Lavieri.
  21. Odin's Rune Chess, by Gary K. Gifford.
  22. Opulent Chess, by Greg Strong.
  23. Salmon P. Chess, by Dale Holmes.
  24. Shatranj Kamil (64), by David Paulowich.
  25. Stack Chess, by Doug Chatham.
  26. TenCubed Chess, by David Paulowich.
  27. TRiPLiCiTY, by David Jagger.
  28. Wildeurasian Qi, by Charles Gilman.
  29. Yagbap, by Jared B. McComb.

Non-competing entries

  1. Franklin Grand Chess, by Ken Franklin.

Finalists

Apologies for the delay. The 8 finalists are now known: Congratulations to all designers of a game that made the finals! Due to contest organizers who were (too) busy with not chess variant related matters, the second round of voting was delayed. To speed things up, here are the revised rules for voting in the finals:

The Rules of the Metagame

Send a chess variant in which the number 10 plays in some way a role to

@chessvariants.org

before April 30, 2005.

You can also send entries on paper to Hans Bodlaender, Nedercamp 26, 3992 RP Houten, the Netherlands.

  1. When submitting your game to the contest, you give us an irrevocable right to publish your variant, without charge, on the Chess Variant Pages and its offline versions. Copyright remains with the author, and you keep the right for publication elsewhere. But you cannot ask to have your variant removed from the website, not for any reason, not even when you do not win the contest. Also, you give the Chess Variant Pages an irrevocable right to create and publish files and/or webpages that enable computer and online play of your variant, e.g. Zillions of Games Rules files, or play on the Game Courier.
  2. In your entry, you may, if you want, also include a few sample games, comments, etc.
  3. If you submit a game, you should send the description of the game (either in html, MS Word, or text-format, with or without added pictures), i.e., it is insufficient to have the game on your own website and send the URL.
  4. Hans Bodlaender is preliminary judge. Submissions to the contest that are not a chess variant, which does not feature the number 10 in any way, or are deemed unsuitable for publication on the Chess Variant Pages for other reasons will be rejected in a preliminary round. Other submissions will be published on The Chess Variant Pages.
  5. A participant may submit at most two competing entries.
  6. The best games will be selected by a two round poll of Chess Variant Pages readers. See Polling below.
  7. An entry having its own variants will have only its 'main variant' judged.
  8. We offer the following tips: Mention games that have inspired you. Write correct English, and be clear and complete in giving rules. You may assume familiarity with the rules of standard chess. (For instance, you can write sentences like: Knights move like in orthodox chess. The purpose of the game is to mate the opponent's General. Stalemated players lose the game.)

Polling

First round poll

  1. The first round of voting will take place from June 30 through September 15, 2005.
  2. All readers of The Chess Variant Pages may vote.
  3. Please, when voting, take into condideration: originality, playability, and how the number 10 plays a role in the variant!
  4. The voting rules can be found here.

Second Round Poll

  1. The second round of voting will take place from September 15 through October 15, 2005, in the same fashion except:
    1. The Maximize Affirmed Majorities version of the Condorcet method will select the winners.
  2. The top five games in the second round will be declared to have won the contest.
  3. There are no prizes to be won this time, but there will be an email interview with the designer of the best game, and each of these five games will have a special logo displayed on its webpage.

Prizes

This contest is just for fun and honour! The winner will be asked to give an email interview, and the winning games get a special logo displayed on their webpages.

Submission format

What else?

If you have questions or concerns, write to Hans Bodlaender (see the feedback page).


Written by Hans Bodlaender. Webpage posted: February 7, 2005. Last modified: October 25, 2005.

The above was authored by: Hans L. Bodlaender. .
Created on: February 07, 2005. Last modified on: October 25, 2005.

See also:

Voting on the contest to design a 10-chess variant. Voting rules and grouping of the games in four sets Author: Fergus Duniho and Hans L. Bodlaender
Voting page for the 10-chess variant design contest. Page with four groups of games; vote before September 15, 2005 Author: Hans L. Bodlaender
10 Minute Melee. Score as many points during 10 minutes of time with regular chessset By: Mason Green
10-directional Chess. 10-directional pieces: an augmented Knight and a restricted Chancellor. By: Jörg Knappen
Attendance Chess. 10 piece types that can move to 10 squares each, mostly. By: Erez Schatz
The Bermuda Chess Angle. Pieces can vanish in a central grid (The Bermuda Chess Angle) depending on dice-determined coordinates. By: Gary K. Gifford
British Chess. Decimal variant with Lions, Unicorns, Dragons, Anglican Bishops, and a royal Queen. By: Fergus Duniho
Camel and Rhino Chess. Variant on 10 by 10 board with new pieces By: Tony Quintanilla
Capablanca Random Chess. Randomized setup for Capablanca chess By: Reinhard Scharnagl
Chariots. Standard pieces start as pairs with shared capabilities, but can separate and recombine. By: David Jagger
Chess with Batteries. Special Battery piece which augments the powers of other pieces. By: Roberto Lavieri
Countdown. Ten player game with sf-theme By: Jared B. McComb
d10 Chess. Roll a ten sided die (d10) every turn to determine which pieces may be moved. By: Bruce Leban
Decima. Variant on 10 by 10 board where you win when you have 10 points on the 10th row. By: Michael Nelson
Ecumenical Eurasian Ninjachess. 3d variant on 10 by 5 by 5 board with many new pieces By: Charles Gilman
Eurasian Chess. Synthesis of European and Asian forms of Chess By: Fergus Duniho
Franklin Grand Chess. On 10 by 10 board with combination pieces and random setup Author: Ken Franklin and Hans L. Bodlaender Inventor: Ken Franklin
Hexa Decimal. Larger hexagonal chess variant By: Joost aan de Brugh
Ladder Shogi. Shogi variant on 10 by 10 board where pieces climb the social ladder by multiple promotions By: Mason Green
Magi. On 10 by 10 board with new pieces and different outcome rules By: Neal Meyer
Manchala Chess. On 10 by 10 board with new pieces By: Dhruv Manchala
Monster Bluff Chess. On 10 boards put together, with putting stakes on squares By: Dale Holmes
More10. Chessvariant on a board with 10 squares By: Roberto Lavieri
Odin's Rune Chess. A game inspired by Carl Jung's concept of synchronicity, runes, and Nordic Mythology. By: Gary K. Gifford
Opulent Chess. A derivative of Grand Chess with additional jumping pieces (Lion and Wizard) By: Greg Strong
Salmon P. Chess. Huge three-dimensional game celebrating 10 years chess variant pages By: Dale Holmes
Shatranj Kamil (64). Modern Shatranj based variant on 8 by 8 board with new pieces By: David Paulowich
Stack Chess. Pieces are stacks of chips. By: Doug Chatham
Taratibu - a small progressive chess variant. 10 pieces per side on a 7-by-7 board. By: Glenn Overby II
TenCubed Chess. Variant on 10 by 10 board with combination pieces By: David Paulowich
TRiPLiCiTY. Three player hexagonal chess variant By: David Jagger
veSQuj - Chess with 21st century armies. A highly tactical variant with a 21st-century-war theme. By: Glenn Overby II
Wildeurasian Qi. Variant on 10 by 10 board combining ideas of several existing variants By: Charles Gilman
Yagbap. A decimal Chess/Amazons hybrid. By: Jared B. McComb
Camel and Rhino Chess. Variant on 10 by 10 board with new pieces. By: Tony Quintanilla
Capablanca Random Chess. Randomized setup for Capablanca chess. Author: Fergus Duniho Inventor: Reinhard Scharnagl
More 10. Chessvariant on a board with 10 squares. Author: Tony Quintanilla Inventor: Roberto Lavieri
Odin's Rune Chess. By: Gary K. Gifford
Opulent Chess. Play this derivative of Grand Chess with additional jumping pieces (Lion and Wizard). By: Greg Strong
Wildeurasian Qi. Variant on 10 by 10 board combining ideas of several existing variants. Author: Tony Quintanilla Inventor: Charles Gilman
10-contest: Voting for group A. Automated poll for the chess variant design contest celebrating 10 years CVP: Please vote!
10-contest: Voting for group B. Automated poll for the chess variant design contest celebrating 10 years CVP: Please vote!
10-contest: Voting for group C. Automated poll for the chess variant design contest celebrating 10 years CVP: Please vote!
10-contest: Voting for group D. Automated poll for the chess variant design contest celebrating 10 years CVP: Please vote!
AtTENdance Chess. (Zillions of Games file) By: Erez Schatz
Chess with Batteries. Special Battery piece which augments the powers of other pieces. (Zillions of Games file) By: Roberto Lavieri
Franklin Grand Chess. On 10 by 10 board with combination pieces and random setup (Zillions of Games file) By: Ken Franklin
Hexa Decimal. Larger hexagonal chess variant (Zillions of Rules file) (Zillions of Games file) By: Joost aan de Brugh
Odin's Rune Chess. (Zillions of Games file) Author: Michael Nelson Inventor: Gary K. Gifford
Opulent Chess. Zillions file for Opulent Chess (Zillions of Games file) By: Greg Strong
Chess with Batteries. Sample game of Rhonan Lavieri vs. Roberto Lavieri. (Zillions of Games Saved Game) Author: Roberto Lavieri and Rhonan Lavieri and Roberto Lavieri
Chess with Batteries. Sample game of Roberto Lavieri vs. Rhonan Lavieri. (Zillions of Games Saved Game) Author: Roberto Lavieri and Rhonan Lavieri and Roberto Lavieri

Comments

DateNameRatingComment
2005-10-25Hans L. Bodlaender NoneOh, and please vote for the finals! And thanks to all who voted in the first round.
2005-10-25Hans L. Bodlaender NoneApologies for the very long delay. I was too busy with other things, and the contest was too long delayed. Clearly, the voting time for the second round has to be extended (otherwise it would be over before starting). To speed things up: each voter (finalists cannot vote) can send an email to me listing the games from good to less good.

Congratulations to all who made the finals, and again apologies.

2005-10-24Jared B. McComb NoneIs it just me or is this contest in a coma?
2005-10-03Jared B. McComb NoneApparently nothing.
2005-10-03Roberto Lavieri NoneWhat´s new?

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Last modified: Tuesday, October 25, 2005