There is talk among some chess circles that the royal game of chess is almost over. The game has become boring and predictable and has reached a stage where creativity is now limited in its scope.
Even the king of chess Bobby Fischer, who is now unfortunately dead (he died in January 2008), was a lawyer shortly before his death a new variation of chess that Fischer called random chess.
Bobby Fischer’s goal here is to create a new type of chess game in which to raise the natural creativity, talent and ability of chess to a new level. He could, where the only root was the memory of the former games and games that had not been crushed. This makes the chess game much more of a real problem within the opening.
Maybe Bobby wanted to add some chance or randomness to the game.
However, this will never actually happen, as even in random chess only a certain number of so-called randomly arranged pieces could still exist or occur. The game is just complicated perhaps in what can be called a deformity, taking away the innate beauty of the game’s time-honored opening set on the chess pieces at the beginning of the game.
The calculation is that a new way of playing another 960 was initially created to open possible.
In this article, we suggest that a simple rule change could be the only answer to the overall goal of adding Bobby creating a game by helping to remove some of the complicated opening positions from the heads of better players.
Of course, there have been many rule changes already made in the past.
It was one of the additions to games in the fourteenth or fifteenth century, when people were allowed to have the option to move one or the other rather than one from the starting position. This certainly sped up the game, and added much needed extra variety to the game.
Another rule was also added at this time, the rule called “en passant,” which, with one exception to the new rule, is allowed, and yet the pawn is allowed to be taken, when he has moved past the enemy pawn in this new way. The obstacle could still optionally be taken by the opposing player with the new rule implementation.
The name of this rule is derived from French Latin, and literally means “passing” and describes that more precisely. what is happening here on the chess board.
The rules of chess have changed so many other times in the past.
The way of example is only one such change of the bishop. The Bishop’s movement was once restricted to being able to move the largest of the two squares at the time while it was still diagonal. She could seem to have skipped any part before her in the first square of her movement, however.
Castling in its modern version was only introduced in the sixth century by the Spanish bishop and chess master Ruy Lopez, from whom the famous chess opening is named.
The rule of fifty moves has existed for centuries, but in the twentieth century it was revised to allow complex issues to require more than fifty moves in order to actually win them. It was argued back and forth about how many moves this really extended to.
The advent of computers finally more or less resolved this ongoing tension and argument.
The rule of fifty moves was moved up to almost a hundred or more moves in some positions, until the powers that be finally claimed that humans could not match these computers, and in 1992 the strict rule of fifty moves was reinstated.
It was claimed at the time that no mortal could ever find in the chessboard the exact 59 moves needed to exemplify the checker and checker versus the checkerboard endgame. It was just too complex for a human brain to process all of this in its head within the time it apparently takes to play a game of chess.
The maximum possible length of a legitimate game of chess due to these restrictions such as the “fifty move rule” and other limited rules known as the “triple repetition position” rule is estimated to be about 6000 long moves.
The number of possible variations in the game of chess from the beginning of the initial position is also named after the first guy who evaluated it.
Shannon’s number is known, after Claude Shannon programmer Claude Shannon. The number ten to 120 is the power of self. A denarius to the second power is a number of one hundred. Ten x ten x ten x ten times written 120 times is a huge number they say.
This number above refers to the chess games that can theoretically be played.
Others have adjusted this estimate to only ten per cent of power, perhaps, because of course the archetype counted a few dignitaries that were included in themselves as illegal, such as when two kings reign together, for example.
The number of possible positions appears to be smaller than this, and is generally only about ten to the forty-third.
My suggestion to make the game of chess even more complex is to simply increase or expand this projection movement as follows.
The king, when projecting from either side of the board, can move to the square between his own square and the adjacent square, which is used for the castle. The rook therefore jumps to the king, but it can be placed in any square of the land, from where the king has been placed up to the state of the king or square. It is not necessary to sit next to the king in this new rule.
The rules about the castle are not allowed, if either the king or the rook is already moved, so that it remains in place, and the rule about not being able to move the king through the square that is already from the attack. adversaries crushed.
This simple enhancement of this one projection move would add a whole other dimension to the game of chess. The strategies would be opened and the books would all be reviewed and recalled, and the game of chess would gradually grow in overall possibility and almost infinite complexity.
Another Bobby Fischer was fished out of the woods, so to speak, and all because his renewed interest was stirred and regenerated by a simple change made to increase the throwing rule in this royal game of chess.