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SELECT * FROM `Item` LEFT JOIN `IndexEntry` USING (ItemID) WHERE `IsHidden` = 0 AND `Item`.`IsDeleted` = 0 AND (`AuthorID` = 'EdFriedlander' OR `AuthorID2` = 'EdFriedlander') ORDER BY `LinkText`, `Item`.`Summary` ASC LIMIT 500 OFFSET 500
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- Non-Random CardChess for Teams. Cardchess with predetermined locations for card pieces.
- Non-Random CardChess for Three. Cardchess with predetermined locations for card pieces.
- Non-Random CardChess for Two. Cardchess with predetermined locations for card pieces.
- Norwegian Chess. Q/N and B/R transform after each move.
- Nuisance Chess. Co-chess variants in which empty cosquares are occupied by nuisances which may be captured by either side.
- Null Chess. Squares on which captures have taken place can no longer be visited.
- Numericron Chess. Score points by attacking enemy units.
- Objective Bastardo. Cut-throat four-player variant where each player has a secret objective.
- Oblong Chess 1. Historic chess variant on 16 by 4 board - Setup 1.
- Oblong Chess 2. Historic chess variant on 16 by 4 board - Setup 2.
- Oblong Chess 3. Historic chess variant on 16 by 4 board - Setup 3.
- Oblong Chess 4. Historic chess variant on 16 by 4 board - Setup 4.
- Oblong Chess 5. Historic chess variant on 16 by 4 board - Setup 5.
- Oblong Chess 6. Historic chess variant on 16 by 4 board - Setup 6.
- Oblong Chess 7. Historic chess variant on 16 by 4 board - Setup 7.
- Omega Chess. Commercial chess variant on board with 104 squares.
- One-Eye Chess (Blind). Kriegspiel variant where one side can see, but lacks both Knights, a Bishop and the Queen.
- One-Eye Chess (Sighted). Kriegspiel variant where one side can see, but lacks both Knights, a Bishop and the Queen.
- Original Kriegspiel. With help of a referee, two players move without knowing the moves of the opponent (captured piece types revealed).
- Outpost Chess. Win by occupying a designated square in enemy territory for one move.
- OverKnight Chess. Pawns are replaced by Knights, which promote.
- Parachute Anywhere Chess. Pieces teleport anywhere without capturing or threatening pieces.
- Parachute Chess. Landing units may not attack any opposing unit.
- Parallel Worlds Chess. Three Boards. Two have the regular setup, while the third.
- Patrol Chess. A unit may not capture or give check unless it is supported.
- Patt-Schach. Start with an illegal move from a stalemated position.
- Patzer Chess. If you can check, you must do so.
- Paul Schooling's Chess. Units transform when they capture.
- Pawn Collector Chess. Pick up counters on the empty squares.
- Pawn Massacre Chess. Black pieces start behind white pawns and vice versa.
- Pawn Odds Chess. White starts without the king's bishop's pawn.
- Pawn Progression Chess. Pawns on advanced ranks move differently.
- Peasant Revolt Chess. Eight pawns vs. three knights and pawn.
- Perfect Chess. Rook, bishop, knight, plus each of the four compounds ("perfect").
- Peruvian Army Chess. A second board has aircraft that can bomb the orthochess board.
- Petite Chess. Chess on a 5 by 6 board.
- Philosopher's Chess. Winner of the 40 squares contest.
- Pickle Pot Chess (Blind). Kriegspiel variant where one side can see, but lacks both Knights, a Bishop and both Rooks.
- Pickle Pot Chess (Sighted). Kriegspiel variant where one side can see, but lacks both Knights, a Bishop and both Rooks.
- Plaid Chess. Progressive Grid chess.
- Pocket Knight Chess. Missing description
- Pocket Knight Chess II. Missing description
- Pocket Knight Chess III. Missing description
- Portuguese Progressive Chess. Missing description
- Power Chess. Missing description
- Pre-Chess. Place your first rank as you choose before the game begins.
- Presto Chess. First check by a unit which cannot be captured wins.
- Progressive 007 Chess. Players play increasing numbers of moves each turn, but which color you move simply alternates.
- Progressive Absorption Chess. Very popular in Italy.
- Progressive Fischer Random Chess. Progressive chess with random setups.
- Progressive Losing Chess. Missing description
- Progressive Mutation Chess. Missing description
- Progressive Take-All Chess. Very popular in Italy.
- Promethean Chess. Units visiting the home squares of others leave behind duplicates.
- Provocation Chess. Missing description
- Proximity Chess. Missing description
- Push Chess. Pieces don't capture, but instead push each other off of the board.
- Quantum Chess. Pieces may teleport, provided their start and end squares are unobserved.
- Queen Odds Chess. White starts without the queen.
- Quest Chess. Missing description
- Racing Kings Chess. Kings race from Rank 1 to Rank 8.
- Rampage Chess. Any unit may move to any square that is guarded.
- Random Files Chess I. Move from a random file if you can.
- Random Files Chess II. Move to or from a random file if you can.
- Random Pieces Chess. Best of 20 rounds with armies of varying strengths.
- Rapid Fire Chess. A unit captures all the units it attacks, without moving.
- Ready Chess. A move must be used to restore a unit's ability to capture, except for the king.
- Recaptureless Chess. A unit which has just captured is itself invulnerable to capture for the move.
- Recruiter Chess. Capturer recruits on adjacent squares.
- Recycle Chess. You may capture your own units and replace them on the board.
- Red Castle Chess. Red king and QR cannot move except to castle, which wins for Red.
- Reflex Chess. Force your opponent to checkmate.
- Reform Chess I. Load your own units.
- Reform Chess II. King and Queen Pawns are special.
- Refusal Chess. You may refuse one enemy move per turn.
- Refuse Once Chess. You may refuse one enemy move per game.
- Renezans Chess. Proprietary game, 9x9, in which the occupant of the center.
- Repatriation Chess. Pairs of captured units are returned to the board.
- Reserve Chess. Units may be removed from the board and dropped back in later.
- Rettah Chess. King can move as any piece but must capture its attacker.
- Revelation Chess. The object is to obtain four knights of your color on the board.
- Reverso Chess. White king and queen are reversed in the initial position.
- Richard Goode's 3D Chess. Three-Dimensional Chess.
- Rifle Chess. Units capture without moving.
- Riga Chess. Escort King and Queen to the opposite side of the board.
- Riley's Four Army Chess. Several ways to win.
- River Chess. Win by getting a piece to the opposite side.
- Rolling Kings Chess. Kings move by themselves.
- Roman Chess. 10x10 variant available commercially.
- Romanchenko's Chess. New chessboard with sides displaced.
- Rook Odds Chess. White starts without the queen's rook.
- Rook Square Chess. Enemy rook squares are royal.
- Rotary. Missing description
- Rotation Chess. Every ten turns, you switch and play the other player's units.
- Royal Magician Chess. Missing description
- Royal Pawn. Missing description
- Rubble Chess. Pieces must clear out unoccupied squares before they can move through them.
- Russian Fortress Chess. Missing description
- Russian Progressive Chess. Missing description
- Russian Symmetric Chess. Russian 9x9 variant.
- Sanctuary Chess. Archbishop and Swiss Guard replace Queen and King; no checkmate.
- Schachdame Chess. Pawns, a bishop, and a royal ferz.
- Scorpion King Chess. King can also move as grasshopper.
- Scotch Chess. Missing description
- Scotch Modern Chess. A check or move to a guarded square ends the series.
- Self Eliminator. You may capture your own units.
- Seven Knights Chess. Unusual army for Red.
- Shafran's Hexagonal Chess. A classic hexagonal variant from Russia.
- Shakti. Christian Freeling's simple, elegant game with disappearing squares.
- Shatar. Java applet to play Mongolian Chess.
- Shatranj. Persian chess, ancestral to the Western forms.
- Shoot Chess. Rifle chess with mandatory captures.
- Shrapnel Chess. Nearest units at 45 degree angles from line of capture.
- Shrink Chess. Emptied rows and columns vanish permanently.
- Shrink Chess II. Emptied edge rows and edge columns vanish permanently.
- Shuffle Chess 1. Missing description
- Shuffle Chess 2. Missing description
- Shuffle Chess 3. Missing description
- Shuffle Chess 4. Missing description
- Siberian Chess. Missing description
- Skirmish Chess. Pawns start on the 3rd and 6th ranks with no double-move, pieces on the 2nd and 7th ranks.
- Slippery Center Chess. Units slide over the center squares.
- Sniper Chess. Frank Maus' game where most pieces move differently when capturing from how they move without capturing.
- Snowplow Chess. Missing description
- Soccer Chess I. Missing description
- Spanish Rules 1283. Missing description
- Spanish Rules 1500. Missing description
- Sphinx Chess. Four dimensions.
- Split Board Chess. Swap halves of the board every 5 moves.
- Sputnik Chess. Rooks, bishops, and knights on the enemy half of the board.
- Start-Again Chess I. Each unit may return to its original square if.
- Start-Again Chess II. Each unit may return to its original square if.
- Static Chess. Take turns placing a unit so that none attacks another.
- Stealth Chess. You must guess which opponent unit is which.
- Stratomic Chess. Tactical nuclear missiles may be deployed after a piece is captured.
- Strong Pawns Chess. Pawns move and promote as minor versions of the pieces they represent.
- Sudden Death Chess. If you do not capture, you must remove one of your own units.
- Super Chess II. Proprietary game from the 1970's.
- Super Chess III. Big proprietary game with archers and cyclopses.
- Super King. King moves as queen but cannot move across a square under attack.
- SuperChess I. Big proprietary game for four. Pawns meet their opponents as in orthochess.
- Swap Chess I. Friendly units may swap places.
- Swarm Chess. Each of your units must move each turn if possible.
- Symmetry Breaking Chess. Units become defined as they are selected and moved.
- Synchronous Chess. The two sides truly move simultaneously.
- Tag Chess. Units which attack the mover are captured.
- Take Me Chess. Object is to lose your units and be unable to move.
- Tamerlane Chess. Old Persian large-board game, widely-played in medieval times.
- Tank Chess. With exploding bombs and pushing tanks.
- Tank Chess II. Queen's Rooks are Tanks, and can push lines of pieces.
- Teamster Chess. Pawns pull the friendly piece behind them.
- Tedco Chess. Three-Dimensional Chess.
- Teleport Chess. Each piece (not king or pawn) may teleport once to any vacant square.
- Termination Chess. Each side must move once with a piece and once with a pawn each turn.
- Thai Chess. Missing description
- Three Check Chess. If you deliver check for the third time, you win.
- Three-Dimensional Chess. Missing description
- Tiger Hunt. White army, complete except for its queen, against a lone Q+Kt.
- Tim's 3D Chess. On a 5x5x5 board with two kings per player.
- Toilet Roll Chess. Missing description
- Too Many Bishops. Place an enemy bishop after your own move.
- Toystore Chess. A problem-like Chess variant on a 5x5 board with free placement.
- Transcendental Chess. Random ordering of first ranks.
- TransChess. CoChess variant. You must move any non-royal unit.
- Transpose Chess. Sideways board, promote your pawns quickly.
- Trap Door Chess. Once moved, a unit disappears if it is not moved again within 5 moves.
- TriChezz. Chess for three on a circular board. Classic proprietary game.
- Triplet Chess. Each turn, move a king, a pawn, and another piece; win when opponent cannot.
- Triscacia. Chess for three.
- Triscacia II. Chess for three on a 10 x 10 board.
- Trophy Hunt Chess. Squirrels and Elephants instead of Kings, Queens and Bishops.
- Tsunami Chess. Variant of Avalanche Chess, pawns move toward your side.
- Tula Chess. Russian local variant.
- Turncoat Chess. Random units turn traitor.
- Turnstyle Chess. Four player variant. Each team member controls.
- Tutti Frutti Chess. Eight different pieces.
- Twenty Knights Chess. Red's 20 knights must mate White within 50 moves.
- Twilight. Missing description
- Twin Chess. Two of each kind of piece.
- Twin Orthodox Chess. Two kings on a 10x10 board.
- Twinkle Chess. Alternately remove and replace an enemy pawn after each move.
- Twinkle Chess II. Remove and replace enemy pawns.
- Twins Chess. Units of a kind move and are captured together.
- Twins Chess -- Variation 1. Java applet to play this game.
- Twins Chess -- Variation 2. Java applet to play this game.
- Twins Chess -- Variation 3. Java applet to play this game.
- Twins Chess -- Variation 4. Java applet to play this game.
- Twins Chess -- Variation 5. Java applet to play this game.
- Twins Chess -- Variation 6. Java applet to play this game.
- Twins Chess -- Variation 7. Java applet to play this game.
- Twins Chess -- Variation 8. Java applet to play this game.
- Twins Chess -- Variation 9. Java applet to play this game.
- Two Fisted Chess. Double-move chess. You must move different pieces of the same kind.
- Two Kings Chess. Win by checkmating either one.
- Ultima. Popular game using the same units, with one rook upside-down.
- Unachess. Add your units when and where you choose.
- Unachess II. Landing units may not check.
- Union Chess. Pieces can fuse into stronger units.
- Unirexal Chess. Which player can win faster, given a queen in place of a king?
- Upside Down Chess. Based on promoting pawns.
- UrChess. Some likely primitive features are restored.
- Valdskak. Icelandic version. Supported units cannot be captured.
- Las Vegas Fun Chess. Game with dice.
- Verney's Four-Handed Chess. Missing description
- Viennese Chess. Free placement with a screen.
- Warlord Chess. Knights move as gryphons; queens move as gryphons or.
- Warp Chess. Ranks 3 and 6 mirror each other, as do 4 and 5.
- Welbeck Kriegspiel. Players choose their own setups, unknown to opponent.
- Wellisch's Hexagonal Chess. Hexagonal chess for three players.
- Wild Chess 7. King and three pawns.
- Wild Chess 8. Leads to an open position.
- Wild Chess 9. Royalty passes between the king and his guard.
- Wildebeest Chess. Game with several kinds of jumpers; one of the more-often played large-board variants.
- Wolf Chess. Older European game with unusual pieces.
- Xadrez Rex. Brazilian hexagonal chess.
- Xenophobic Chess. Win by penetrating enemy territory.
- Yeoman Chess. Pawns can move diagonally backwards and.
- Yitong. Java applet for Manchurian Chess, a variant on Chinese Chess.
- Zen Chess. Capture enemy pieces according to their moves.
- Zip Chess. Pawns may move any number of square forward.
- Zombie Co-Chess. Co-Chess variant.
- Zoo Chess. Capture four kinds of opposing units.
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