[ List Earliest Comments Only For Pages | Games | Rated Pages | Rated Games | Subjects of Discussion ]
Comments/Ratings for a Single Item
it helped me with all my chess needs thanks!
give more history?
the page gives good information but when you show the games you sould be aloud to play a mini version of the game and see if it is intresting because from what i read i thought these games look fun and i would like to play a number of them before i download it. thanks for you time.
this is completely in error, chataranga is a four player game pre-dating crist, you dopes.
Great! I have to try Chaturanga with my friends. Very interesting!
At least pople are agreeing that India had some form of chess from the earliest of times Thanx for the info.
Holly crap I've never been to a site with so much info on chess....i mean wow this is a really good site and im a huge chess fan
This site is o.k. but you should let people play chess on it!
If a reader says 'give me more history', then there should be a prominent paragraph with links to: history, shatranj, xiang qi, shogi. Skip if you've heard this story. When I was 14 years old or so, I used to go to the library every week to read some more of HJR Murray's thousand page history of chess, week after week until I finished. And when I finished, I knew that Chess was not just this one little game with one specific set of rules that I strived to master (and since I'm a national master and an FM, I guess you can say that I did so), no, Chess was not just one game with one set of rules, but rather Chess was a big thing, with billions and billious of games with a wide range of rules. Therefore, according to my own experience, one of the best ways to promote chess variants is to teach the history of chess. Chess variant people often like to make new rules more than they like to play the games; and often also they are less skillful at playing the games than they are at making the rules. Rarely one finds the Chess Variant inventor who is superhuman at chess but totally naive at variants (the two prime examples are Fischer and Capablanca). During my lifetime, the field of chess variants has advanced to an incredible degree. To a large extent I have been able to lead because the average of my chess skill and my variant skill is far higher than anybody else -- and I am not ashamed to claim that my average of the two skills is higher than the divine Parton or the superhuman Fischer -- and if you spread the word about chess history can you imagine what will happen in the future? Imagine an era when chessmasters routinely know about Shatranj and Shogi and Xiang Qi and the Colorbound Clobberers! In such a utopia, the very best ideas that you or I have had will be seen as mere fumblings in the dark by ignorant savages -- and the perception will be correct. Have you met any Grandmasters? Have you played? Do you truly understand how both their knowledge and their wisdom of Chess is far beyond what a mere mortal can hope to achieve? I have; as a mere master, I have what's needed to appreciate the greatness of grandmasters. Imagine an era when Grandmasters of Chess are also routinely Grandmasters of Chess Variants. ((Emanuel Lasker imagined it although he never proposed any variants.)) ... and the one thing you can do to facilitate this vision is to make it easier for people to learn about the history of Chess!
i dont really like this site sorry!
I think this is a great site. :-) I was interested at the remarkably direct connection across disparate cultures; and remember that chess is a game of intellect and skill...a really deep thought, eh?
No history.Bad for school kids.doesn't give you inside info.The info on SHogi(or whatever it is is good.Not Bad all up!
Provided the info I wanted, and more. Gracias.
I liked this page because it gave me good imformation on my school project and it was interesting too.
This page doesn't tell you one thing that would help you on any project. And also I have a very old encyclopeida which told me that when ever a pawn got to the end of the board it had to be promoted into a queen, which could only move one spot diagonally. Also you do not tell me how this connects to chiness chess in anyway. For example, how did the chiness come up with a cannon piece if it was based off of this game. Also many historyians have said that all types of chess were based off of chiness chess. In other words, you need more information and resource that would prove what you have just put down on your website.
I have added more historical and background information in the form of a sidebar.
Murray's notion that 2-sided Chatrang predates the 4-sided Chaturanga is totally wrong. Where is some evidence? What about previous chess historian Prof Duncan Forbes proof for the priority of the 4-sided game? No mention of Stuart Cullen either. An appalling summary of Chaturanga that should be removed from the web! www.chaturanga.com
Honestly! See Jean-Louis Cazaux's page on the relative ages of 2-handed
and 4-handed Chaturanga. It can be found at:
<ul>
<li><a href='http://www.chez.com/cazaux/chaturanga.htm'>http://www.chez.com/cazaux/chaturanga.htm</a>
</ul>
Neither Forbes nor Cullen are considered exactly up-to-date sources, you
know.
At first glance, I assumed that the 'rating' was of the person, not of the site.
Well, I had to go view the complainant's cited page, to give him his due, and it might appear that he, or at least someone, has a modest commercial interest in this issue. I might be more inclined to give his views some thought...especially since I once held them...but for his utter lack of politeness. The preponderance of the evidence in 2002 argues for the 2-handed game being first, possibly by centuries, but the question is surely not settled.
25 comments displayed
Permalink to the exact comments currently displayed.