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In December 1998, shortly after getting Zillions of Games, I used it to create this game, Cavalier Chess. As the name suggests, Cavalier Chess is Chess on horseback. Every piece but the Queen is replaced by a more powerful counterpart, and every new piece in the game has some kind of Knight move. Pawns are replaced by Chinese Chess Knights, which in this game are called Cavaliers. Rooks, Bishops, Knights, and Kings are replaced with Marshalls (R+N), Paladins (B+N), Nightriders (multiple N moves), and Knight Kings (K+N). You can play this game on a regular two-color chess board, using regular Chess pieces for the pieces they replace. But when I play it, I use a three-color board with Knights from some smaller sets for the Cavaliers. Photographs of this are available, and I recommend looking at them to get an idea of what this game should look like.
The Knight King moves like a Knight or a King. It may move to any
adjacent square like a King or jump like a Knight. Like the King in
Chess, it may not move into check, because it is the object of the game
to checkmate this piece. Unlike the King in Chess, the Knight King may
not castle.
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The Queen is unchanged from Chess. She can move across a straight line
any number of spaces in any direction.
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The Marshall combines the moves of Rook and Knight. It can move across
a straight line any number of spaces in any orthogonal direction, or it
may jump like a Knight. Unlike the Rook in Chess, it may not castle.
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The Paladin combines the moves of Bishop and Knight. It can move across
a straight line any number of spaces in any diagonal direction, or it
may jump like a Knight.
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The Nightrider has an extended Knight's move. It can make any number of Knight moves in the same direction, so long as each landing square is unoccupied.
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The Cavalier moves like a Knight but cannot jump pieces. It moves one square orthogonally, followed by a diagonal move in the same direction. A Cavalier's move is blocked if a piece occupies a square orthogonally adjacent to it. The Cavalier moves just like the Knight in Chinese Chess. When it reaches the eighth rank, it promotes to the piece whose starting square it lands on. Since Cavaliers cannot promote to Knight Kings, a Cavalier which lands on the Knight King's starting square promotes to any other superior piece of the player's choosing.
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Created on: October 17, 1999. Last modified on: January 04, 2001.
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Last modified: Monday, December 22, 2008