The most popular of these [large forms of Shogi] was Chu Shogi.... I am presenting its rules here, despite the game's complexity, for two reasons: It is my favorite chess variant, and its unusual pieces may give readers ideas for creating many other chess variants....
-- R. Wayne Schmittberger, New Rules for Classic Games
Anything worth doing is worth overdoing.
-- Anonymous
Typhoon
Typhoon is a chess variant played on a 12 by 12 board. It was invented in 1999 by Adrian King (me), and is a submission for the the contest to design large chess variants.
The Origins of Typhoon
Shortly after I had submitted Scirocco, a 10 x 10 chess variant, to the contest to design large chess variants, I came down with a cold. Late one evening, after a long, overcaffeinated, slightly feverish day, a funny question popped into my brain: What if the inventor of Chu Shogi had based the game on Scirocco instead of (archaic) Shogi?
Each side in the 12 x 12 game of Chu Shogi starts out with some 46 pieces, and so if you had, say, just two or three types of pawn (Scirocco has two types), but otherwise had only one of each piece (as you do in Scirocco, except for the two Scirocchi), you'd start out with 30-odd different kinds of piece. If each piece promoted to yet another kind of piece, you'd have a game with around 70 different kinds of piece altogether.
You'd have a vast, sprawling, mess.
You'd have, in fact, something that looked like the aftermath of a typhoon.
Well, I had discovered a good name for a game; it incorporated the wind theme (like Scirocco) and the Japanese theme, for Chu Shogi ("typhoon" comes from Japanese taifuu, "supreme wind"). After an insomniac night I got up the next morning and scribbled the first notes on what was to become the game that goes with the name.
A Distressing Realization
I've never had much use for painter Jackson Pollock's untidier canvases, but I'm afraid I'm getting some insight into the impulse that led to their creation.
The Initial Setup
Typhoon is a game on a 12 x 12 board for two players, called Blue and Tan. Blue moves first.
The setup is rather flexible. Except for the pawn row, where the setup is fixed, the setup is designed in terms of pairs of pieces. One member of each pair goes on the left side of the board, and the other on the right, but it does not matter which one goes on which side, provided that the overall setup is symmetrical.
The symmetry requirement is as follows: Tan's setup must be either identical to Blue's (rotated 180 degrees about the center of the board), or it must be the mirror image of Blue's (reflected across the line running between ranks 6 and 7). If the setup has rotational symmetry, then Blue and Tan have the same pieces at a1 and l12, b1 and k12, c1 and j12, and so on; if the setup has mirror symmetry, they have the same pieces at a1 and a12, b1 and b12, c1 and c12, and so on.
Tan gets to choose the entire initial setup. (This is only a modest compensation for the fact that Blue gets the first move, since no setup appears to provide much advantage for either player over any other setup.)
The initial setup looks like this for each player (either member of a pair may be placed in a spot where the name of a pair appears):
| Go-Between Pair | Go-Between Pair | ||||||||||
| Fu | Pawn | Pawn | Guard | Pawn | Pawn | Pawn | Pawn | Guard | Pawn | Pawn | Fu |
| Side Pair | Odd Pair | Square Pair | Horse Pair | Metal Pair | Princely Pair | Princely Pair | Metal Pair | Horse Pair | Square Pair | Odd Pair | Side Pair |
| Dagger Pair | Colorbound Pair | Ancient Pair | Short Pair | Short Pair | Ancient Pair | Colorbound Pair | Dagger Pair | ||||
| Lance Pair | Fat Pair | Animal Pair | Queenlet Pair | Guardian Pair | Regal Pair | Regal Pair | Guardian Pair | Queenlet Pair | Animal Pair | Fat Pair | Lance Pair |
-
For Blue:
Lance Pair a1, l1; Fat Pair b1, k1; Animal Pair c1, j1; Queenlet Pair d1, i1; Guardian Pair e1, h1; Regal Pair f1, g1
Dagger Pair a2, l2; Colorbound Pair c2, j2; Ancient Pair e2, h2; Short Pair f2, g2
Side Pair a3, l3; Odd Pair b3, k3; Square Pair c3, j3; Horse Pair d3, i3; Metal Pair e3, h3; Princely Pair f3, g3
Two Fus a4, l4; Eight Pawns b4 - c4, e4 - h4, j4 - k4; Two Guards: d4, i4
Go-Between Pair: d5, i5 -
For Tan:
Lance Pair a12, l12; Fat Pair b12, k12; Animal Pair c12, j12; Queenlet Pair d12, i12; Guardian Pair e12, h12; Regal Pair f12, g12
Dagger Pair a11, l11; Colorbound Pair c11, j11; Ancient Pair e11, h11; Short Pair f11, g11
Side Pair a10, l10; Odd Pair b10, k10; Square Pair c10, j10; Horse Pair d10, i10; Metal Pair e10, h10; Princely Pair f10, g10
Two Fus a9, l9; Eight Pawns b9 - c9, e9 - h9, j9 - k9; Two Guards: d9, i9
Go-Between Pair: d8, i8
The Pieces
Here is a summary of the pieces used in the game. Their moves are described in a notation that I hope will not be too obscure (at least to those familiar with other chess variants), but if it is not clear, each piece is described in detail below.
All of the pieces from Scirocco also appear in Typhoon, except for the Frog and the Emperor (there is a piece with the name "Emperor", but it moves differently from the Scirocco Emperor). The promoted values of a few pieces have changed from Scirocco, and the Dabbaba and Alfil, which appear only as promoted ranks in Scirocco, appear unpromoted in Typhoon.
| Piece | Abbreviation | Abilities | Promotes to | Promoted Abbreviation | Promoted Abilities |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lance Pair: a1, l1, a12, l12 | |||||
| Fire Horse | FH | forward R + backward N | Flying Ox | FO | B + forward R + backward R |
| Ghost Warrior | GW | forward R + backward F | Free Boar | FB | B + side R |
| Fat Pair: b1, k1, b12, k12 | |||||
| Marquis | Ma | W + N | Abbot | Ab | N + B4 |
| Priest | Pr | F + N | Duke | Du | N + R4 |
| Animal Pair: c1, j1, c12, j12 | |||||
| Stork | St | W (capturing) + A | Queen | Q | R + B |
| Goat | Go | F (moving) + D | Lioness | Li | W + F + D + N + A |
| Queenlet Pair: d1, i1, d12, i12 | |||||
| Cicada | Ci | like Q3, but must hop at least one piece (of either color; not captured) along the way | Typhoon | Ty | F + A + R3; need not stop when it makes a capture orthogonally, and so may capture up to 3 pieces in a turn |
| Salamander | Sa | Q3 (moving); W + F (capturing) | Genie | Ge | Q3 + capture by igui on adjacent squares |
| Guardian Pair: e1, h1, e12, h12 | |||||
| Gold General | GG | W + forward F | Horned Owl | HO | B4 + side D + backward D + forward Parrot |
| Ferocious Leopard | FL | F + forward W + backward W | Diving Osprey | DO | R4 + backward A + forward Raven |
| Regal Pair: f1, g1, f12, g12 | |||||
| King | K | W + F; royal | Emperor | Em | Q2 + N; royal |
| Emperor of Emperors | EE | W + F + D + N + A + (3,0) leaper + C + Z + (3,3) leaper; also, capture by igui (shooting) along Q lines; royal | |||
| Commoner | Co | W + F | Wildebeest | Wi | N + C |
| Dagger Pair: a2, l2, a11, l11 | |||||
| Cuckoo | Cu | side W + back W + forward D; also, on forward-W, side-W, or back-D space, may convert an opposing piece to a friendly piece (this takes a turn) | Longleaper | Lo | Q (moving); to capture, hops along Q lines to empty space beyond opposing piece (immediately beyond or through any number of clear spaces beyond); opposing piece is captured; may capture again repeatedly on same turn in the same direction as long as a capture is available in that direction (but may stop while a capture is still available) |
| Hummingbird | Hu | side W + back W + forward D; also, may interchange its position with any piece (friendly or opposing) on a W, forward-D, or back-D space | Immobilizer | Im | Q (moving); paralyzes all adjacent opposing pieces; a paralyzed piece may capture itself (this takes a turn) |
| Colorbound Pair: c2, j2, c11, j11 | |||||
| Camel | C | C | Squirrel | Sq | D + N + A |
| Bishop's Dog | BD | B3 | Centaur | Ce | W + F + N |
| Ancient Pair: e2, h2, e11, h11 | |||||
| Alfil | A | A | Scirocco | Sc | W + B |
| Dabbaba | D | D | Dragon Kite | DK | F + R |
| Short Pair: f2, g2, f11, g11 | |||||
| Wazir | W | W | Zag | Za | F + A + hop-capture over orthogonally adjacent pieces |
| Firzan | F | F | Zig | Zi | W + D + hop-capture over diagonally adjacent pieces |
| Side Pair: a3, l3, a10, l10 | |||||
| Otter | Ot | F + side R4 + forward W | Missionary | Mi | W + B2 (moving); cannot capture, but may convert opposing piece to friendly piece when the opposing piece is adjacent to arrival square of Missionary and on Missionary's line of movement |
| Beaver | Be | side R4 + back R + forward F + forward W | Sorcerer | So | W + B2 (moving); may capture one or more opposing pieces when first piece captured is adjacent to arrival square of Sorcerer and on Sorcerer's line of movement; additional pieces are captured along the same line as far as that line is occupied by opposing pieces, so Sorcerer can capture up to 10 pieces at a time on 12 x 12 board. Always captures all possible pieces if captures any piece; cannot capture just part of a line of opposing pieces |
| Odd Pair: b3, k3, b10, k10 | |||||
| Overtaker | Ov | F + W (moving); hop-capture over adjacent piece | Nightrider | Nr | Nr (a series of N steps along a straight line, in the same way as a Rook is a series of W steps along a straight line) |
| Undertaker | Un | F + W (moving); captures by withdrawal (moving one step directly away from adjacent opposing piece, which is captured) | Dayrider | Da | F + W (moving); Dabbaba-rider + Alfil-rider (can repeat Dabbaba or Alfil move along a straight line, in the same way as a Rook is a series of W steps along a straight line) |
| Square Pair: c3, j3, c10, j10 | |||||
| Chariot | Ch | R4 | Octopus | Oc | F then R outwards; can move but not capture as F |
| Wagon | Wa | R, but not to orthogonally adjacent space (blockable there) | Spider | Sp | W then B outwards; can move but not capture as W |
| Horse Pair: d3, i3, d10, i10 | |||||
| Knight | N | N | Rook | R | R |
| Dervish | De | D + A; also, adjacent friendly pieces can hop over Dervish (without capturing it) | Harpy | Ha | Q (moving); cannot capture; relays to friendly pieces ability to move as N on squares one N-move away |
| Metal Pair: e3, h3, e10, h10 | |||||
| Silver General | SG | F + forward W | Vulture | Vu | B (moving) + R (capturing) + W + F |
| Copper General | CG | forward F + forward W + backward W | Ibis | Ib | R (moving) + B (capturing) + W + F |
| Princely Pair: f3, g3, f10, g10 | |||||
| Drunk Elephant | DE | F + forward W + side W | Elephant Prince | EP | F + W (moving); N + A (capturing); royal |
| Blind Tiger | BT | F + side W + backward W | Tiger Prince | TP | F + W (moving); D + N (capturing); royal |
| Two Fus: a4, l4, a9, l9 | |||||
| Fu | Fu | forward W | Zebra | Z | Z |
| Eight Pawns: b4 - c4, e4 - h4, j4 - k4, b9 - c9, e9 - h9, j9 - k9 | |||||
| Pawn | P | forward W (moving) + forward F (capturing) | Tadpole | Ta | F + (3,0) leaper (moving and capturing); W (capturing) |
| Two Guards: d4, i4, d9, i9 | |||||
| Guard | Gu | W (moving) + F (capturing) | Bishop | B | B |
| Go-Between Pair: d5, i5, d8, i8 | |||||
| Lantern | La | forward F | Parrot | Pa | W + D + igui capture on orthogonally adjacent spaces; also, hop-capture on orthogonally adjacent spaces, where destination space may also contain an opposing piece, in which case 2 pieces are captured; also, may pass a turn |
| Banner | Ba | forward W + side W | Raven | Ra | F + A + igui capture on diagonally adjacent spaces; also, hop-capture on diagonally adjacent spaces, where destination space may also contain an opposing piece, in which case 2 pieces are captured; also, may pass a turn |
As in Scirocco, most of the initial pieces are fairly weak, none being worth more than about a Rook. This leads to a relatively quiet opening. However, the promoted pieces are generally stronger than in Scirocco, so the endgame tends to be quite vigorous.
The King has a special promotion rule, as explained below.
In alphabetical order:
The Abbot moves and captures like a Knight, or like a Bishop,
but not farther away than four spaces.
The Abbot is based on the frequently invented combination of Knight
and Bishop.
Since
Grand Chess was a part of the inspiration for this game,
I thought I should have a Knight + Bishop piece in the game somewhere,
but I seemed to have too many strong promoted pieces, so I limited the
range of the Bishop movement.
The Knight + Bishop combination is called the "Cardinal" in Grand
Chess, and I thought I'd keep the ecclesiastical theme in the
Abbot's name (as well as the
Priest's).
The
Alfil is a (2,2) leaper;
that is, it leaps two spaces diagonally, ignoring any intervening piece.
The Alfil is a piece of ancient lineage, being the predecessor to
the modern Bishop.
It is a very weak piece, worth not much more than a Pawn, although
it promotes fairly strongly
(to the Scirocco, which is the piece I used in the game of
Scirocco to replace the modern Bishop, which replaced the Alfil --
so there is a logic behind this promotion).
The Banner moves and captures as a Wazir in the forward and side
directions; it cannot move backwards.
The Banner, along with its twin the Lantern, replaces the
Go-Betweens of
Chu Shogi.
The Go-Betweens move only straight forward and backward, but I
thought that being confined to a single file was too limiting a
life, so I gave the Banner a little more freedom.
The Beaver moves and captures as a Firzan in the two forward directions,
or one step forward as a
Wazir, or up to four steps to the left or right as a Rook,
or straight backwards any distance as a Rook.
The Beaver and its twin the Otter are kin to the
Chu Shogi Side Mover;
they are difficult to advance, but their strong sideways movement
makes them quite useful as defenders.
The
Bishop moves the same as its Orthochess equivalent; that is,
it moves when not capturing diagonally any number of clear spaces,
and captures by moving diagonally across any number of clear spaces to
the first space occupied by an opposing piece, which the Bishop
replaces.
The Bishop's Dog moves and captures like a Bishop, but not farther
than three spaces from its starting square.
The name is taken from the Bishop and from the Lion Dog, a piece
from some of the larger Shogi variants that moves like a Queen up to
three spaces.
The Blind Tiger moves and captures like a Commoner, but not
straight forwards.
The Blind Tiger is retained from
Chu Shogi.
In that game, the Blind Tiger does not promote to a royal piece, as it
does in Typhoon;
however, the idea of twinning the Drunk Elephant and Blind Tiger
(and making their promotions similar, too) seemed to good to pass up.
The
Camel is a (3,1) leaper;
that is to say, it leaps directly to any space that could be reached
by moving three spaces along any rank or file, and then one space at
right angles.
It is thus a sort of extended, colorbound Knight.
As is typical of the initial Typhoon pieces, the Camel is
fairly weak, but not worthless (it's worth a little less
than a Knight).
The Camel's movement geometry is also different from that of every
other unpromoted piece, so that it can attack without being attacked.
The Centaur moves and captures as a Wazir, Firzan, or Knight.
The Centaur's name is taken from its ability to move as a man
(Commoner; German Mann) or horse (Knight).
The Chariot moves and captures like a Rook, but not farther away than
four spaces.
The Chariot is one of the two Rook-like pieces I derived by reducing
the strength of a Rook, the other being its twin, the Wagon.
Ralph Betza has conducted some
experiments with this piece.
The Cicada moves and captures along Queen lines up to three spaces
away.
However, it must hop over at least one piece on the way to its
destination square (it may hop over two).
The piece or pieces hopped over are not captured.
For example, given a Blue Cicada at b2,
a Tan Bishop at b3, a Blue Guard at d4, a Blue Knight at c2,
a Tan Rook at d2, and a Tan Spider at e2, the Cicada may make any
of the following moves:
The Cicada is fairly agile in the earlier parts of the game when there
are plenty of pieces to hop over,
but should be exchanged off or promoted before the board becomes
too sparsely populated.
The Cicada is named for the insect whose loud droning song is
characteristic of summer in many parts of the world;
cicadas are particularly common in Japan, so many historical games
of
Chu Shogi
must have been played to its accompaniment.
The Commoner (known in some games as the
"Mann") moves and captures exactly like a King, but is not
royal (capturing it does not end the game).
This piece was handed down from
Courier Chess,
where it also sits next to the King in the initial setup.
The Copper General moves and captures like a
Commoner, but not orthogonally sideways
or diagonally backwards;
in the middle of an empty board, it can move to any of four squares.
The Copper General is a piece from
Chu Shogi.
It is part of a logical progression:
a Gold General that can reach six squares,
a Silver General that can reach five, and
the Copper General, which can reach four.
The pieces are set up in that order on the first rank of a
Chu Shogi board.
The Cuckoo moves and captures like a Wazir sideways and backwards, or
like a Dabbaba forwards.
In addition, on the orthogonally adjacent squares to the left, right,
and straight ahead, or on the square two steps straight back (ignoring
any piece on the square one step straight back), the Cuckoo may,
without moving,
convert an opposing piece to a friendly piece; this takes a turn.
For example, given a Blue Cuckoo on a4 and a Tan Pawn on a5,
the Cuckoo may transform the Tan Pawn into a Blue Pawn.
This makes the Pawn effectively change direction; that is, the
transformed Blue Pawn moves northwards like all other Blue Pawns, and
does not somehow remember its previous southward orientation from its
life as a Tan Pawn.
Because the Cuckoo is not particularly agile, its ability to change
the ownership of a piece is not as formidable as you might suppose.
However, the ability makes it more awkward to exchange an
orthogonally moving piece for a Cuckoo.
The
Dabbaba is a (2,0) leaper;
that is, it leaps two spaces orthogonally,
ignoring any intervening piece.
The name "Dabbaba" was used for various unorthodox pieces in
medieval Islamic chess variants.
The move we generally associate with this name today is the one
from
Timur's Great Chess.
The word "dabbaba" means a kind of war machine;
its English translation is "sow", but I have no idea what it looks
like.
The Dayrider may move and capture as a Dabbaba or Alfil;
it may also repeat a Dabbaba's or Alfil's move as far as it wishes
in the same direction through
clear spaces until it reaches the edge of the board, or is
blocked by a friendly piece, or lands on an opposing piece,
capturing it.
In addition, the Dayrider may move without capturing as a Commoner
(to prevent the Dayrider from being colorbound).
In short, the Dayrider is a Dabbabarider plus an Alfilrider plus a
noncapturing Commoner.
I invented the Dayrider as a complement to its twin, the Nightrider.
The Dervish moves and captures two steps orthogonally or diagonally.
It leaps any intervening piece without capturing
or being blocked by it.
In addition, any friendly piece on any of the eight adjacent squares may
leap to the opposite side of the Dervish (to move or capture, provided
the target square is not occupied by a friendly piece).
Thus, if there is a Blue Dervish on b5 and a Blue Pawn on a4, the Pawn
may leap to c6 (or make a normal Pawn move to a5).
A piece cannot promote on a turn when it uses the
Dabbaba- or Alfil-like move
relayed by a Dervish; it can promote only when moving under its own
power.
A dervish is a Muslim ascetic.
Dervish orders are known for their whirling dances (to induce a
trance-like state).
The movements of the adjacent pieces across the Dervish reminded me
of whirling, whence the name.
The Diving Osprey can move and capture like a Rook up to 4 steps, or
like an Alfil in the backward directions.
It can also move like a Raven in the forward directions only;
that is,
it can:
The Diving Osprey was inspired by the
Chu Shogi piece called the Soaring Eagle, but is less
powerful.
The Dragon Kite
moves and captures one step diagonally or any number
of steps orthogonally, that is, as a Firzan or Rook.
This is the same as the move of the promoted Rook (or Dragon King)
in Shogi;
the Dragon King also exists as an unpromoted piece in
Chu Shogi.
I renamed this piece "Dragon Kite" from "Dragon King" to preserve
the wind-related theme of its twin, the Scirocco
(which was itself renamed from "Dragon Horse").
The Drunk Elephant moves and captures like a Commoner, but not
straight backwards.
The Drunk Elephant is retained from
Chu Shogi.
As in that game, it promotes in Typhoon to a royal piece (although
not to the Crown Prince of Chu Shogi, which moves just like a King).
In Chu Shogi, the Drunk Elephant starts on the first rank, and is
such a good defender of the King that it almost never ventures far
enough forward to promote.
The Drunk Elephant in Typhoon starts on the third rank, somewhat
increasing its chance of actually promoting to an Elephant Prince.
The abbreviations for the Drunk Elephant and the Dervish differ only
in case; if there is a chance of ambiguity, you might prefer the
abbreviations "DEl" and "Der".
The Duke moves and captures like a Knight, or like a Rook,
but not farther away than four spaces.
The Duke is to the Marquis as the Abbot is to the Priest;
it extends the one-step move to a four-step ride.
However, I made the Marquis promote to the Abbot, not to the Duke,
so that the promoted Marquis wouldn't be a superset of the
Marquis (meaning there might be situations where you would decline
promotion).
Hence the Priest promotes to the Duke, not to the Abbot.
The Knight + Rook combination is called the "Marshall" in Grand
Chess, and I thought I'd give this piece a vaguely military sounding
name.
"General" sounded too much like "Genie", and is also the translation
of "Firzan".
The two-character abbreviation for "Colonel" would have been
identical to that of "Commoner".
I settled on "Duke"; the name is hard to confuse with that of
other pieces, and was
originally a military title, from Latin dux, meaning "leader".
The Elephant Prince, a royal piece, moves when not capturing as a
Commoner, and captures like Knight or Alfil.
The Elephant Prince can capture on more spaces than a King, and
so is better than a King as an offensive piece;
however, a King can single-handedly checkmate an Elephant Prince.
The Emperor, a royal piece,
moves and captures like a Knight, or like a Queen up to
two steps;
it is thus nearly as powerful as a Lioness.
The strength of this promotion may give
your King a powerful incentive to make
the risky journey to the promotion zone.
The Emperor is only one of two possible promotions of the King;
the other is the Emperor of Emperors.
The entry for the King describes the difference.
The Emperor of Emperors is a royal piece.
It leaps to move or capture
to any square within three steps of its starting square;
that is, it moves as a non-capturing Wazir, Firzan,
Dabbaba, Knight, Alfil, (3,0) leaper, Camel, Zebra, or
(3,3) leaper.
The Emperor of Emperors may also
capture any piece a Queen could capture,
but the Emperor of Emperors does so without moving;
various authors have called this kind of capture "rifle capture",
"shooting", or "igui".
The game of
Rifle Chess
is based on rifle capture.
Players of Rifle Chess sometimes use the rule that capture is
obligatory, but the Emperor of Emperors is never obliged to make a
capture.
The Emperor of Emperors is an exceedingly powerful piece, but
difficult to obtain.
The Emperor of Emperors is only one of
two possible promotions of the King;
the other is the Emperor.
The entry for the King describes the difference,
and tells why it is easier to get an Emperor than an
Emperor of Emperors.
The Ferocious Leopard moves and captures like a
Commoner, but not sideways orthogonally;
in the middle of an empty board, it can move to any of six squares.
The Ferocious Leopard is a piece from
Chu Shogi.
It is certainly a useful piece in both defense and offense,
but the inventor may have overstated the case in calling it
"ferocious".
The Fire Horse moves and captures forwards like a Rook,
or backwards like a Knight.
Starting in a back corner of the board, the Fire Horse is difficult
to get moving in any direction except straight ahead.
Its inspiration was the
Chu Shogi Lance,
which starts in the same position, and also moves forwards like a
Rook (but the Lance can't move backwards).
The
Firzan, also known variously as "Fers", "Ferz", or "Farzin",
moves and captures one step diagonally.
The Firzan (Arabic, from the Persian word for "general")
was present in the oldest forms of chess of which we are
aware, but has been replaced in Orthochess by the Queen.
The Flying Ox moves and captures like a Queen, except that it may
not move or capture sideways like a Rook.
The Flying Ox is a
Chu Shogi piece,
although in Chu Shogi it promotes from a different
piece (the Vertical Mover, which doesn't appear in Typhoon).
The Free Boar moves and captures like a Queen, except that it may
not move or capture forwards or backwards like a Rook.
The Free Boar is a
Chu Shogi piece,
although in Chu Shogi it promotes from a different
piece (the Side Mover, which doesn't appear in Typhoon).
The Fu moves and captures one step straight ahead.
The Fu is the pawn used in Shogi and
Chu Shogi, and "Fu" is the usual Japanese term for the piece
(the characters written on the piece actually read "fuhyou" or "hohei",
meaning "foot soldier").
The Genie moves and captures as a Queen, but not farther away than
three spaces.
In addition, the Genie can capture an opposing piece on an
(orthogonally or diagonally) adjacent square without moving.
The Genie
is a reasonably powerful piece in the endgame because of its
ability to capture a protected piece without exposing itself to harm.
However, it is generally not the most powerful piece in the game,
as it is in Scirocco;
it is relatively weaker on the 12 x 12 board compared with long-range
pieces like the Queen, and there are a number of other powerful
promoted pieces available.
The Ghost Warrior moves and captures forwards like a Rook,
or backwards like a Firzan.
Starting in a back corner of the board, the Ghost Warrior is difficult
to get moving in any direction except straight ahead.
Its inspiration was the
Chu Shogi Lance,
which starts in the same position, and also moves forwards like a
Rook (but the Lance can't move backwards).
The Goat moves and captures by leaping two steps orthogonally
(like a Dabbaba);
it may also move one square diagonally, but not to capture.
When moving two steps, it leaps any intervening piece without capturing
or being blocked by it.
The Goat is a weakened form of Kirin, a piece from
Chu Shogi.
The Kirin can capture as well as move one step diagonally.
I wanted to add the Kirin for a bit of Chu Shogi flavor, but
I already had too many eightfold leapers, so I toned it down a bit
and gave it a less exotic name.
The Gold General moves and captures like a
Commoner, but not diagonally backwards;
in the middle of an empty board, it can move to any of six squares.
The Gold General is a piece from
Shogi
(as well as
Chu Shogi).
It appears to have replaced the less powerful
Firzan back in the prehistory of Shogi.
The Guard moves
without capturing one step orthogonally,
or captures one step diagonally.
It is a sort of omnidirectional Pawn.
The Guard's Pawn-like nature allows it to participate in a Pawn
chain, but unlike an easily blocked Pawn, it can get up and leave
if it becomes bored.
The Harpy moves like a Queen, but cannot capture by itself.
However, any friendly piece a Knight's move away from the Harpy
is temporarily granted the additional power to move and capture
like a Knight (as long as it starts its move a Knight's move away
from the Harpy); pieces that can already move like a Knight are
not affected.
A piece cannot promote on a turn when it uses the Knight's move
relayed by a Harpy; it can promote only when moving under its own
power.
The Harpy is kin to the Knight in
Knight-Relay Chess,
but unlike the Relay Knight, a Harpy is not immune from capture.
The Harpy is pretty useless if you don't have a lot of pieces left;
in such a case, it may be better to leave your Dervish unpromoted.
If you have a bunch of weak pieces and can place the Harpy where it
influences several of them, however, the Harpy can be quite powerful.
The Horned Owl can move and capture like a Bishop up to 4 steps, or
like a Dabbaba in the side and backward directions.
It can also move like a Parrot in the forward direction only;
that is,
it can:
The Horned Owl was inspired by the
Chu Shogi piece called the Horned Falcon, but is less
powerful.
The Hummingbird moves and captures like
a Wazir sideways and backwards, or
like a Dabbaba forwards.
In addition,
the Hummingbird may exchange places with any piece (friendly or
opposing)
on the four orthogonally adjacent squares and on the
two squares that are two steps straight ahead and straight back
(ignoring any piece on the square one step straight ahead or
straight back);
this takes a turn.
For example, given a Blue Hummingbird on a4, a Tan Pawn on a5,
a Blue Otter on a2, and a Tan Squirrel on b4,
the Hummingbird may move to a5 while moving the Pawn to a4,
or it may capture the Squirrel by moving to b4, or it may
exchange places with the Squirrel or the Otter.
The Hummingbird may also leap to the empty square at a3 or a6.
In practice, the Hummingbird's ability to exchange
places with a piece is usually easier to exercise on a friendly
piece than on an opposing piece.
The Ibis captures like a Bishop and moves without capturing like
a Rook.
It may also capture like a Wazir and move without capturing like
a Firzan, so that it can both move and capture on adjacent squares.
The Immobilizer moves like a Queen, but cannot capture.
However, any opposing piece orthogonally or diagonally adjacent to
an Immobilizer is incapable of movement as long as it remains next
to the Immobilizer, except that the immobilized piece
may capture itself ("commit suicide").
An immobilized piece cannot make any type of move under its own
power except self-capture;
for example, an immobilized Cuckoo cannot convert an opposing piece,
an immobilized Harpy cannot relay the ability to move as a Knight,
and an immobilized Raven cannot pass a turn.
However, a piece with relay power (such as a Dervish or Harpy)
or the ability to exchange places with another piece
(a Hummingbird) can allow an immobilized piece to make a move with
the relayed ability (as long as the relaying piece is not itself
immobilized).
An immobilized Immobilizer cannot move, but is still capable of
immobilizing adjacent opposing pieces.
This means that two adjacent Immobilizers immobilize each other until
one is captured or until some other piece relays a move to one of
the Immobilizers.
The purpose of the self-capture move allowed to immobilized pieces
is to disclose a line of attack on the Immobilizer.
The Immobilizer, like its twin the Longleaper, is taken directly
from Robert Abbott's unusual and innovative game
Ultima.
The
King moves and captures one step to any of the eight
orthogonally and
diagonally adjacent squares.
It is a royal piece, one of five in the game;
capturing all your opponent's royal pieces wins the game
(by convention, the game more commonly ends with checkmate,
an unstoppable threat to capture the last royal piece.
However, note that the victory conditions
for Typhoon are different from those of Orthochess).
The King has moved the same way for almost a millenium and a half.
Special rules govern the promotion of the King.
If there is no Emperor on the board (belonging to either player),
then the King promotes to an Emperor.
However, if either player has an Emperor, the King
promotes to an Emperor of Emperors, which is far more powerful
than an Emperor.
This rule came about as follows:
I wanted to encourage players to try to promote the King, since
marching the King across the board is generally risky, and adds to
the excitement of the game.
The best way to encourage promoting the King is to have it
promote strongly.
However, if the King promotes to a strong Emperor, the Emperor
will be difficult to catch;
if both players have an Emperor, the game may be a draw, since neither
can pin the oppponent's Emperor down.
After a game as long as Typhoon, a draw is hardly a satisfying outcome,
so I built into the game a strong disincentive to
promote to an Emperor unless you are confident that your opponent
won't be able to do the same:
if you have an Emperor and your opponent promotes a King,
your opponent gets an Emperor of Emperors, a piece of
overwhelming power.
This promotion rule means that an Emperor of Emperors won't appear in
games of Typhoon very often, unless the player who promoted to
Emperor made a serious miscalculation; however, the threat
that one player might get an Emperor of Emperors can have a real effect
on the course of the game, by preventing promotions to Emperor.
Note that although the reasoning behind introducing the Emperor of
Emperors is to try to avoid the situation where both players have
equally mobile strong royal pieces,
it is possible (although not very likely) for the same player to
acquire both an Emperor and an Emperor of Emperors.
If your opponent has two royal pieces (after, say, promoting
the Drunk Elephant to an Elephant Prince),
your Cuckoo or Missionary can convert the opponent's King to your
ownership, so that you may have two Kings on the board.
In such a case, if you promote both Kings,
the first becomes an Emperor and (provided you don't lose your
Emperor in the meantime) the second becomes an Emperor of
Emperors.
The
Knight is a (2,1) leaper;
that is to say, it leaps directly to any space that could be reached
by moving 2 spaces along any rank or file, and then one space at
right angles.
The Knight is a piece retained from the earliest known forms
of chess.
The Lantern moves and captures as a Firzan in the two forward
directions; it cannot move backwards.
The Lantern, along with its twin the Banner, replaces the
Go-Betweens of
Chu Shogi.
The Go-Betweens move only straight forward and backward, but I
thought that being confined to a single file was too limiting a
life, so I gave the Lantern a little more freedom.
The Lioness can leap to any square a King could reach in two moves;
that is, it is a combination of Wazir, Firzan, Dabbaba, Knight, and
Alfil.
The Lioness is inspired by the
Chu Shogi piece called the Lion.
In addition to moving like the Lioness, the Lion can make two full
King-type moves on a single turn,
with the ability to capture pieces on both parts of
the move, or to move back to the starting square.
The Chu Shogi Lion is generally valued at about twice a Queen;
the Lioness is probably a little weaker than a Queen on a
12 x 12 board.
The promotion of Goat to Lioness also has a Chu Shogi origin;
in Chu Shogi, the Kirin, which inspired the Goat, promotes to a Lion.
The Longleaper moves when not capturing like a Queen.
To capture, it hops along Queen lines over an opposing piece to
an empty space beyond the piece along the same line;
the opposing piece is captured.
The space immediately beyond the opposing piece on the Longleaper's
line of movement must be empty.
If there are more opposing pieces along the same line of movement,
the Longleaper may continue to capture pieces along that line as long
as the square beyond each captured piece is empty and no friendly
pieces are interposed between the captured opposing pieces.
The Longleaper may land on any empty space along the line of movement
beyond the last captured piece.
The Longleaper may never leap an empty space or land on an occupied
square.
The Longleaper is extremely powerful when opposing forces consist mainly
of widely scattered weak pieces; it can often position itself so that
it threatens to capture in several different directions.
The Longleaper is taken directly
from Robert Abbott's
Ultima.
The Marquis moves and captures like a Wazir or a Knight.
The antecedent of the Marquis is the Marshall (Rook + Knight)
of Christian Freeling's
Grand Chess,
but the Marshall is too powerful
to be a starting piece in Typhoon.
The Missionary moves like a Wazir, or up to two steps as a Bishop.
It cannot capture, but if it ends its move adjacent to an opposing
piece along the line of the Missionary's movement, then the Missionary
may (but is not required to) convert the opposing piece to a friendly
piece.
For example, given a Blue Missionary on a3 and a Tan Pawn on d6,
the Missionary may move to c5 and convert the Tan Pawn to a Blue Pawn
(it may also leave the Tan Pawn as a Tan Pawn).
This makes the Pawn effectively change direction; that is, the
transformed Blue Pawn moves northwards like all other Blue Pawns, and
does not somehow remember its previous southward orientation from its
life as a Tan Pawn.
The Missionary's twin, the Sorcerer, can capture multiple pieces on
the same turn, but the Missionary can convert only one piece per turn.
The Cuckoo's ability to change the ownership of
a piece is slightly different, since the Cuckoo cannot move and
convert in the same turn, while the Missionary cannot convert without
moving.
The Missionary's ability to start its move at a distance from the
piece to be converted
makes it moderately strong, but its low mobility means that it is
not really formidable.
The
Nightrider may move and capture as a Knight;
it may also repeat a Knight's move as far as it wishes
in the same direction through
clear spaces until it reaches the edge of the board, or is
blocked by a friendly piece, or lands on an opposing piece,
capturing it.
In short, the Nightrider is to the Knight as the Rook is to the
Wazir.
The Nightrider is a well-known fairy chess piece, introduced to many
readers by Anthony Dickins's
A Guide to Fairy Chess.
The Octopus moves one step diagonally, then like a Rook orthogonally,
but only in a direction away from its starting square.
That is, it cannot reach an orthogonally adjacent square.
It can both move and capture on the Rook-like part of its move, but
it can only move without capturing to the diagonally adjacent square.
That means that the closest square on which it can make a capture is
a Knight's move away.
The name "Octopus" for this piece comes from a copy of some unpublished
material on a game concept called "Generalized Chess"
by the great game inventor Wayne Schmittberger,
forwarded to me by Edward Jackman.
It wasn't clear from Wayne's description whether his Octopus could
actually move one space diagonally or had to move at least as far
as a Knight, so I split the difference and allowed my
Octopus to move like a Firzan but not to capture like one.
The ultimate ancestor of the Octopus is probably the Giraffe of
Timur's Great Chess.
Timur's Giraffe moves differently from the piece we usually
know today as the
Giraffe;
Timur's Giraffe moves like the Octopus, but must move a minimum distance
of four steps, i.e., at least as far as a modern Giraffe's move.
The Otter moves and captures as a Firzan, or one step forward as a
Wazir, or up to four steps to the left or right as a Rook.
The Otter and its twin the Beaver are kin to the
Chu Shogi Side Mover;
they are difficult to advance, but their strong sideways movement
makes them quite useful as defenders.
When not capturing, the Overtaker moves like a Commoner.
To capture, it may leap an orthogonally or diagonally
adjacent hostile piece to capture
it, provided that the space immediately beyond (where the Overtaker
winds up) is empty.
For example, given a Blue Overtaker on a4 and a Tan Pawn on a5, the
Overtaker may capture the Pawn by hopping it to a6.
The Overtaker cannot hop a friendly piece.
The Parrot has a complex move.
It can do any of the following:
The Parrot is derived from a
Chu Shogi piece called the Horned Falcon, which moves like the
Parrot but only forwards (it moves like a Queen in the other
directions).
I eliminated the Queen-like movement and extended the forward movement
to all four orthogonal directions.
Promotes to Tadpole
The
Pawn moves one step straight ahead when not capturing, or
one step diagonally forwards (left or right) to capture.
Unlike the Orthochess Pawn, the Pawn in Typhoon does not have
the option of making a two-step move.
The Priest moves and captures like a Firzan or a Knight.
The antecedent of the Priest is the
Grand Chess
Cardinal (Bishop + Knight),
just as that of the Marquis is the Grand Chess Marshal.
The
Queen moves and captures like a Rook or Bishop,
as in Orthochess.
The promotion of the Stork to the Queen was inspired by the
Chu Shogi Phoenix's promotion to Free King.
In Chu Shogi, the Free King moves just like an Orthochess Queen,
and the Stork was derived from the Phoenix.
The Raven has a complex move.
It can do any of the following:
The Raven is derived from a
Chu Shogi piece called the Soaring Eagle, which moves like the
Raven but only forwards (it moves like a Queen in the other
directions).
I eliminated the Queen-like movement and extended the forward movement
to all four diagonal directions.
The
Rook moves the same as its Orthochess equivalent; that is,
it moves when not capturing orthogonally any number of clear spaces,
and captures by moving orthogonally across any number of clear spaces to
the first space occupied by an opposing piece, which the Rook
replaces.
The Rook has moved the same way since the earliest forms of
chess.
The Salamander moves when not capturing like a Queen, up to four
steps away;
however, it can capture only adjacent pieces, like a
Commoner.
The Salamander is fairly agile but not particularly powerful; the
best thing to do with it is often to promote it.
A salamander is an amphibian with a lizard-shaped body.
Did you know that the largest salamander in the world is
the Japanese Salamander?
(If that's a reference to
Chu Shogi,
it's an oblique one.)
The Scirocco
moves and captures one step orthogonally or any number
of steps diagonally, that is, as a Wazir or Bishop.
This is the same as the move of the promoted Bishop (or Dragon Horse)
in Shogi;
the Dragon Horse also exists as an unpromoted piece in
Chu Shogi.
This piece appears as an initial piece in the game of Scirocco,
but only as a promoted piece in Typhoon.
The Silver General moves and captures like a
Commoner, but not orthogonally sideways
or backwards;
in the middle of an empty board, it can move to any of five squares.
The Silver General is a piece from
Shogi
(as well as
Chu Shogi).
It appears to have replaced the less powerful Alfil in many chess
variants in the eastward branch of chess evolution;
the same piece is found today (in what Westerners think of as the
Bishop's slot) in the native chess variants of
Burma
and
Thailand.
The Sorcerer moves like a Wazir, or up to two steps as a Bishop.
It cannot land on an opposing piece,
but if it ends its move adjacent to an opposing
piece along the line of the Sorcerer's movement, then the Sorcerer
may (but is not required to) capture the opposing piece and all
contiguous opposing pieces along the same line of movement.
(The Sorcerer must capture all the pieces it can, or none; it
cannot capture only some of the pieces eligible for capture.)
The type of capture the Sorcerer performs is sometimes called
"capture by approach".
In the unlikely event that opposing pieces are lined up just right,
the Sorcerer can capture as many as ten pieces in a single turn.
For example, given a Blue Sorcerer on a3, a Tan Pawn on c3,
a Tan Camel on d3, and a Tan Knight on f3,
the Sorcerer can move to b3, capturing the
Pawn and Camel (it may also leave the Pawn and Camel uncaptured).
It cannot capture the Knight because there is a gap between the
Knight and the Camel.
The Sorcerer's ability to end its move on a square other than one
previously occupied by a captured piece
and its ability to capture multiple pieces
at a time may make it sound powerful, but its mobility is low, so
it's not as tough as you might think.
The Spider moves one step orthogonally, then like a Bishop diagonally,
but only in a direction away from its starting square.
It can both move and capture on the Bishop-like part of its move, but
it can only move without capturing to the orthogonally adjacent square.
That means that the closest square on which it can make a capture is
a Knight's move away.
The Spider is the diagonal counterpart of the orthogonal Octopus, and like the Octopus, was taken
from an unpublished piece by Wayne Schmittberger.
The Squirrel moves and captures as a Dabbaba, Knight, or Alfil.
The Squirrel is among the many interesting pieces that appears
in Anthony Dickins's
A Guide to Fairy Chess.
Dickins ascribes its invention to N. Kovacs of Budapest.
The Stork moves and captures by leaping two steps diagonally
(like an Alfil);
it may also capture one square orthogonally, but not move there
without capturing.
When moving two steps, it leaps any intervening piece without capturing
or being blocked by it.
The Stork is a weakened form of Phoenix, a piece from Chu Shogi.
The Phoenix can both move and capture one step orthogonally.
The Tadpole moves and captures as a Firzan
or as a (3,0);
that is, it can move to an adjacent square, or leap to a square
three steps away orthogonally or diagonally (ignoring any intervening
pieces).
It may also capture as a Wazir, but not move without capturing as
a Wazir.
The Tadpole is a slightly weaker version of the Scirocco
Frog.
Since the Pawn doesn't go through a complex promotion cycle in
Typhoon, I figured it shouldn't promote quite as strongly.
The Tiger Prince, a royal piece, moves when not capturing as a
Commoner, and captures like Dabbaba or Knight.
The Tiger Prince can capture on more spaces than a King, and
so is better than a King as an offensive piece;
however, a King can single-handedly checkmate a Tiger Prince.
The Typhoon moves and captures like a Firzan or an Alfil, or like a
Rook up to three spaces.
When moving like a Rook, however, it does not have to stop when it
makes a capture;
it can continue in the same direction as long as it does not hit
a friendly piece or exceed the three-step limit.
This means it can capture up to three pieces in a single turn.
Since the game of Scirocco includes a piece with the same name as
the game, I thought I'd put one in this game as well.
The Typhoon is not especially mobile, but its ability to capture
multiple pieces or to keep moving after a capture make it fairly
valuable.
When not capturing, the Undertaker moves like a Commoner.
To capture, it moves on step (like a Commoner)
away from an orthogonally or diagonally
adjacent hostile piece;
if the hostile piece lies along the line of the Undertaker's
movement, it is captured.
For example, given a Blue Undertaker on a4 and a Tan Pawn on a5, the
Undertaker may capture the Pawn by moving to a3.
An Undertaker cannot move to an occupied square.
The Vulture captures like a Rook and moves without capturing like
a Bishop.
It may also capture like a Firzan and move without capturing like
a Wazir, so that it can both move and capture on adjacent squares.
An adjacent-space restriction similar to the Wagon's
is also found in the Talia, or Scout, in
Timur's Great Chess (the web page translates "Talia" as "Picket").
However, the Talia moves as a restricted Bishop, rather than a
restricted Rook.
I wanted a weakened form of the Rook so that the Rooks would not
dominate the board too early.
Of all the spaces a Rook can move to, the immediately adjacent spaces
are probably the most important (at least until the board opens up),
so removing the ability to reach an adjacent space makes the
Wagon weaker than the Rook by more than you might expect
(although less so on the 12 x 12 Typhoon board than on the 10 x 10
Scirocco board).
I chose the name "Wagon" because its meaning is similar
to "Chariot", the original name of the Rook;
wagons are generally less maneuverable than chariots, so the name
seemed appropriate.
The
Wazir moves and captures one step orthogonally.
The name "Wazir" (Arabic, "vizier", meaning a government minister or
adviser),
like the name "Dabbaba", was used for pieces with
different moves in different medieval Islamic chess variants.
The Wazir's move in this game is the one commonly used today, and is
the same as in
Timur's Great Chess.
The Wazir has sufficiently low mobility that it is seldom
worthwhile advancing it, and it often winds up as a defender of the
King in the endgame.
The Wildebeest moves and captures like a Knight or Camel.
The Wildebeest, also called the Gnu ("gnu" being another word for
"wildebeest"), is among the pieces described
in Anthony Dickins's
A Guide to Fairy Chess.
Wayne Schmittberger liked the piece well enough to name a chess
variant,
Wildebeest Chess, after it.
The Zag moves and captures like a Firzan or Alfil;
in addition,
it may leap an orthogonally adjacent hostile piece to capture
it, provided that the space immediately beyond (where the Zag winds
up) is empty.
The Zag may not move orthogonally when not capturing, however.
I made up the name and the move of this piece for the
game of Scirocco.
The Zag is the diagonal counterpart of the orthogonally moving
Zig.
Because of its long reach,
the Zebra is fairly weak as leapers go; it has relatively few
squares on the board from which it exercise its full power.
The Zig moves and captures like a Wazir or Dabbaba;
in addition,
it may leap a diagonally adjacent hostile piece to capture
it, provided that the space immediately beyond (where the Zig winds
up) is empty.
The Zig may not move diagonally when not capturing, however.
I made up the name and the move of this piece for the
game of Scirocco.
The Zig is the orthogonal counterpart of the diagonally moving
Zag.
A piece may promote at the end of any move it makes that starts or
ends (or both starts and ends) in its owner's promotion zone.
Blue's promotion zone is ranks 9 through 12, or Tan's pawn row
and beyond; Tan's is ranks 1 through 4, Blue's pawn row and beyond.
Promotion is always optional.
Even when you move a Pawn onto the last rank, you are within your
rights (if not in your right mind) not to promote it.
Promotion cannot occur when a piece moves using a movement capability
relayed by another piece, e.g., a Dervish, Harpy, or Hummingbird
(a Hummingbird may itself promote if it changes place with another
piece, provided that the Hummingbird starts or ends its move in the
promotion zone).
If a piece to which a movement capability could be relayed
already has the movement capability in question (as in the
case of a Goat leaping orthogonally over a Dervish), the piece is
considered to be moving under its own power, and may promote if its
move starts or ends within the promotion zone.
A piece is not entitled to promote when a Cuckoo or Missionary changes
its ownership within the promotion zone;
the piece itself must make a subsequent move (starting or ending within
the zone) in order to promote.
If a Dervish located within the promotion zone relays
a move to another piece,
the Dervish does not thereby gain the right to promote on
that turn.
Similarly, a Cuckoo changing the ownership of a piece within the
promotion zone is not entitled to promote.
Unlike the usual version of this Bare King rule,
there is no provision for a draw if you can immediately bare
the opponent's last royal piece;
as soon as you are down to one piece, you lose, period.
It is not, strictly speaking, illegal to move your last royal piece
into check.
It is certainly foolish, though.
On the other hand,
there is no constraint on moving a royal piece into check when you
have more than one royal piece;
in fact, there are situations where it is advantageous to do so.
Note that these rules make stalemate a loss for the stalemated player,
not a draw.
The Bare King rule means that when you are reduced to two pieces, both
are effectively royal.
You can move your King into what looks like check if it captures
your opponent's last piece, since you win the game before your
opponent can recapture.
It is illegal to make a move that causes
a given game situation to occur a third time in
the same game.
Two game situations are considered the same if the same types of
pieces are in the same places and it is the same player's turn to move.
Specifically, repetition does not result in a draw; one player
must make a move that leaves the cycle of repeating moves.
When a player is to move but
has no move that would not cause an illegal repetition,
that player loses the game.
As an example of this repetition rule,
consider how it would apply to a trivial game played on a 2 by 3
board, with rules the same as Typhoon except as specified.
The game starts with a White King on a1 and a Black King on b3;
in this microscopic chess variant, there is no Bare King rule
(so the game is not already over at the beginning).
This game must proceed as follows:
At this point, the move 4. ... K-b3 would recreate the initial position
again; this would be the third occurrence of that position, so the
move is not legal.
If this variant allows a King to move into check, Black must do so
(with 4. ... K-a2 or 4. ... K-b2), in which case White will capture
the King and win on the next move; if this variant does not allow
moving into check, then Black has no legal move, and loses immediately.
If you have read the above rules carefully, you will realize that any
game of Typhoon played to the bitter end cannot result in a draw.
Even if neither player is checkmated or reduced to a single royal
piece,
the repetition rule ensures that the game will end, because the number
of possible board positions is finite, and each position cannot occur
more than twice.
When no more positions are available, the player whose turn it is will
lose.
Players may, however, agree to a draw if they are so inclined.
It is conceivable that both players may be reduced to a small number
of weak but highly mobile pieces, so that the repetition rule must be
invoked to determine who wins the game.
I'm not going to pin down exactly when agreeing to a draw is advisable,
but if I hear of anyone playing a game of Typhoon that lasts
thousands of moves, I will be very disappointed.
I have playtested Typhoon only a little bit, and only against
Zillions (and I have let Zillions play
against itself).
Zillions plays this game quite badly; the game is large enough that
the computer player cannot look ahead very far, and Zillions's
heuristics for valuing pieces break down for many of the
Typhoon pieces with unusual powers.
I think it is fair to say that although a game of Typhoon begins
relatively sedately, endings can be quite wild.
The rest of this section is more conjectural; human players may
discover different strategies from the ones I've encountered with
Zillions.
The weak, short-range pieces available at the start of a
game of Typhoon lead in the opening to a
series of distinct battles scattered about the board.
Later in the midgame, as pieces start to promote to more powerful,
long-range pieces, the smaller battles coalesce into a single,
highly tactical, very complex mess.
If the game has been fairly even up to this point,
the advantage can appear to shift sharply
several times before the end of
the game.
The most powerful piece late in the endgame is often
the Longleaper, which
can quickly decimate scattered defenders.
A major element of Typhoon strategy is often to try to promote your
Cuckoo while preventing your opponent from doing the same.
However, the Longleaper is by no means omnipotent, especially if
your opponent's forces are compactly positioned or if your
opponent possesses sufficiently many Queen-type pieces;
acquiring a Longleaper may be worth some sacrifice of material,
but don't overdo it.
Most games of Typhoon seem to last around 150 to 200 moves or more.
Zillions of Games! is
the remarkable computer program from
Zillions Development
that will play with you any game you can describe to it
(using a special programming language called ZRF).
Although I have tested many of the pieces in Typhoon against
Zillions,
Zillions 1.0.2 (the current version as of today, 24 April 1999)
contains some bugs that have prevented me from implementing some
things in what I'd consider a reasonable way.
The last I heard, Zillions 1.0.3 was supposed to come out shortly,
so I hope to be able to provide a Zillions implementation of Typhoon
once that happens.
Abbot (Ab)
Alfil (A)
Banner (Ba)
Beaver (Be)
Bishop (B)
Bishop's Dog (BD)
Blind Tiger (BT)
Camel (C)
Centaur (Ce)
Chariot (Ch)
Cicada (Ci)
Commoner (Co)
Copper General (CG)
Cuckoo (Cu)
Dabbaba (D)
Dayrider (Da)
Dervish (De)
Diving Osprey (DO)
Dragon Kite (DK)
Drunk Elephant (DE)
Duke (Du)
Elephant Prince (EP)
Emperor (Em)
Emperor Of Emperors (EE)
Ferocious Leopard (FL)
Fire Horse (FH)
Firzan (F)
Flying Ox (FO)
Free Boar (FB)
Fu (Fu)
Genie (Ge)
Ghost Warrior (GW)
Goat (Go)
Gold General (GG)
Guard (Gu)
Harpy (Ha)
Horned Owl (HO)
Hummingbird (Hu)
Ibis (Ib)
Immobilizer (Im)
King (K)
Knight (N)
Lantern (La)
Lioness (Li)
Longleaper (Lo)
Marquis (Ma)
Missionary (Mi)
Nightrider (Nr)
Octopus (Oc)
Otter (Ot)
Overtaker (Ov)
Parrot (Pa)
Pawn (P)
Priest (Pr)
Queen (Q)
Raven (Ra)
Rook (R)
Salamander (Sa)
Scirocco (Sc)
Silver General (SG)
Sorcerer (So)
Spider (Sp)
Squirrel (Sq)
Stork (St)
Tadpole (Ta)
Tiger Prince (TP)
Typhoon (Ty)
Undertaker (Un)
Vulture (Vu)
Wagon (Wa)
Wazir (W)
Wildebeest (Wi)
Zag (Za)
Zebra (Z)
The
Zebra is a (3,2) leaper;
that is to say, it leaps directly to any space that could be reached
by moving three spaces along any rank or file, and then two spaces at
right angles.
This makes it an even more extended "Knight" than a Camel.
Zig (Zi)
Promotion Rules
Victory Conditions
You lose the game (and your opponent wins) if any of the following
occurs:
Repetition
1. K-b1 K-a3
2. K-a1 K-b3 ; 2nd occurrence of initial position
3. K-b1 K-a3
4. K-a1
Draws
Strategy
Notation
Several of the types of moves in Typhoon are unconventional and
pose a slight problem for notation.
Some possible points of difficulty:
Wa-a7 rather than Waa7),
but leaving out the dash does not actually introduce any
ambiguity.
-
destination=promoted
or Shogi-style as
unpromoted-destination+,
since it is always obvious from context what a piece promotes to.
x! notation usual
for Chu Shogi;
e.g., Gex!c6 for a Genie capturing a Pawn on c6.
This notation can also be used for the long-distance igui capture
by an Emperor of Emperors.
Zixd4-e5) may avoid momentary confusion
in the mind of a reader.
Raxi4xj5,
or Loxd3xd8xd10-d12,
or So-f5xg6xh7.
a3=Tan (it should
be obvious that a Cuckoo caused the change of ownership).
A Missionary's move might look like Mi-e5:e6=Blue.
Where's the Zillions File?
Addendum
Now, Adrian King has written a file for playing Typhoon with Zillions of
Games: You can
download this file now.
Written by Adrian King.
Addendum by Hans Bodlaender.
This variant is an entry in the
1999 Large Variant contest.
WWW page created: April 27, 1999. Last modified: August 10, 1999.