Recently, Four-Player Chaturanga and its variants, especially ZM Machiavellian Quadchess, have become very popular at the Oak Park Chess Club. Wanting a little more variety, we spent two months experimenting with different pieces and positions, and finally designed European Chess, a variant of ZM Quadchess in which every game is completely different, due to the fact that each player chooses one of 38 different armies, each with a different starting position and a different special ability that can affect the course of the game.
We have tried to make all 38 armies as balanced as possible, but we understand that some armies may be better than others. We appreciate all the comments we can get! =)
Note that rules are very similar to ZM Machiavellian Quadchess, with some exceptions.
Starting configuration for Britain |
Britain has four ministers , and is only checkmated when the last surviving minister is checkmated. As long as Britain has more than one minister on the field, British ministers can be captured like normal pieces. Ministers can move like kings and like knights. |
Starting configuration for France |
Once per game, you may declare a revolution instead of moving. You may only declare a revolution if you are not in check or checkmate, you have at least two pawns, and at least one piece was lost in the game since your last turn. When you declare a revolution, you first lose your king and two pawns (you choose which pawns to lose). However, you cannot be checkmated unless you lose all your pieces except your pawns. After this, all your pieces become different pieces, with different names (however, if you gain control of another player’s piece, the piece becomes transformed as well, and if another player gains control of your piece, the piece changes back to a normal chess piece. Your pawns are citizens that can move and capture exactly like a king in standard chess. Your knight is an executioner that can move (but not capture) up to three squares horizontally or vertically. If there is an enemy piece in the executioner’s way, that piece will be pushed backwards by the executioner as many squares as needed for him to reach his destination. If there are multiple pieces in the way, then they will all be pushed, but a royal piece cannot be pushed. If a piece is pushed off the board, it is destroyed. Your bishop is a constitutional bishop. It moves and captures like a normal bishop, but if it ever moves to a square horizontally or vertically adjacent to an enemy piece, its owner takes control of the bishop (if it is adjacent to multiple players’ pieces, you choose the player who takes control of your bishop. Your rook is an orator. It moves like a knight but does not capture, and all pieces within two horizontal or vertical squares of the orator cannot move. |
Starting configuration for Spain |
Spanish pawns can move like kings. At the start of the game, place 16 Natives in the 4x4 square in the center of the board. The Natives do not belong to any player and do not move. No player may lose pieces or capture an opponent’s pieces until all the Natives have been captured. Once a piece has captured two Natives, it may not capture any more Natives. Players keep a running total of the number of Natives that they capture. After all Natives have been captured, every player gains a number of pawns equal to the number of Natives that they captured. Each new pawn must be placed next to an existing pawn that that player controls. |
Starting configuration for Portugal |
You may move your pieces as though the top and bottom sides of the board are connected, and the right and left sides of the board are connected. You may not capture while crossing a side of the board. |
Starting configuration for Italy |
Italian bishops can, instead of moving normally, choose to jump two squares diagonally in any direction. When jumping, like knights, bishops can jump over other pieces. Whenever an Italian bishop moves into another player’s corner, it promotes to an archbishop . Archbishops can move like regular Italian bishops, but can also jump one or two squares horizontally or vertically. |
Starting configuration for Switzerland |
An enemy player may only capture a Swiss piece if:
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Starting configuration for the Netherlands |
Whenever a Dutch piece moves to a space horizontally or vertically (not diagonally) adjacent to an enemy piece, you take control the enemy piece, while that player takes control of your piece. If a Dutch piece moves to a space adjacent to two or more enemy pieces, you can choose which piece to trade with. Neither your king nor enemy kings can be traded. You cannot trade on your first turn. If trading is not allowed in any situation, you may still make the move, but no trade occurs. |
Starting configuration for the Holy Roman Empire |
The same German rook may not move two turns in a row. A German rook may not move in the same direction that another German rook moved on your last turn. When a German rook is captured, the piece that captured it cannot be captured by a German rook on your next turn, but can be captured on later turns. However, when a German rook is adjacent horizontally, vertically, or diagonally to the German king, all of the above restrictions are removed and the rook can move as in standard chess. |
Starting configuration for Austria |
Whenever an Austrian knight moves to a position where he is threatening an enemy piece that is also threatened by another Austrian knight, that piece is immediately removed from the game. |
Starting configuration for Prussia |
Whenever an Prussian piece moves to a square where it is on the same rank or file as an enemy piece of the same type, and there is no other piece between them, the enemy piece is pulled 3 squares toward the Prussian piece (or until is adjacent to the Prussian piece). In the diagram to the right, when the Prussian knight A made its move, enemy knight B is pulled 3 squares towards knight A. Knight C is not pulled because there is a pawn between it and the Prussian knight. The pawn is not moved because it is not a knight, and Prussian pieces only pull pieces of the same “type”. |
Starting configuration for Poland |
On your turn, after you move, you have the option of giving a pawn to any opponent, once per turn. Remove that pawn from the game, and the chosen opponent can put an extra pawn of his/her color into the game, as outlined below. That opponent, for the next two turns, may not capture any of your pieces, and whenever he captures any piece during his next two turns, you get an extra pawn (not from any player, but just an additional pawn). Whenever a player receives additional pawns, he/she must place the pawn(s) on any of available red square, as shown at right, at the start of his/her next turn. If you are unable to place a pawn at the start of your next turn, or choose not to, that pawn is lost. |
Starting configuration for Sweden |
You may move the king and another piece on the same turn, in any order. You may not use this ability two turns in a row. |
Starting configuration for Russia |
Whenever a Russian pawn is more than five squares (vertical or horizontal, not diagonal) away from the Russian queen, and there is an enemy piece (not a pawn) closer to it than the Russian queen is, the pawn switches color to be on the same side as the piece that “helped it escape”. Whenever a pawn “escapes” once, it remains that color for the rest of the game, unless a different country’s special ability is used to change its color. When the Russian queen is captured, the king moves and acts (in terms of Russia’s ability) exactly like a queen. |
Starting configuration for the Ottoman Empire |
The Turks do not start with any pieces, but with four deployment squares (represented as ?’s in the diagram at left), and have one king, two pawns, two bishops, two knights, and one rook. On your turn, you have the choice of either moving a piece or placing a piece from your reserve onto an empty deployment square. If you don’t have any pieces in play, and it is not your first turn, you lose the game automatically. However, your pieces may not be captured until the end of your second turn. Three of the first five pieces you play must be the king and two pawns. |
Starting configuration for Sparta |
The Spartan warrior can move as a queen and as a knight, and cannot be moved or captured as a result of other players’ special abilities. |
Starting configuration for Athens |
You may move an Athenian bishop to any open space on the board, as long as you don’t put an opponent in check by doing so. Additionally, you may not use this ability two turns in a row. |
Starting configuration for Macedonia |
After moving a piece on your turn, you may move again if you sacrifice a piece you control. Remove the sacrificed piece from the game. You may do this any number of times per turn, but if you put another player in check, your turn automatically ends. |
Starting configuration for the Roman Empire |
On your turn, instead of moving one piece, you may choose to move two pawns. |
Starting configuration for the Carthagian Empire |
Carthagian elephants can move up to three squares horizontally or vertically each turn, and may only be captured by pieces no more than two squares away from them. |
Starting configuration for Gaul |
Whenever an Gaul piece moves to a square where it is on the same rank or file as an enemy piece of the same type, and there is no other piece between them, the enemy piece is pulled 2 squares away from the Gaul piece (or until is adjacent to the boundary of the board or to another piece). This is very similar to the power of Prussia, but works backwards. See Prussia for an example. |
Starting configuration for Persia |
Every time you lose a piece, you can put it back near your starting area (red squares in the diagram to the right) at the end of your next turn. If your king is ever checked, he is automatically checkmated, unless you can capture the checking piece on your next turn. |
Starting configuration for the Byzantine Empire |
At the end of every opponent’s turn, you can move any of your pieces back to the space where it started the game (any pawn square for pawns), provided the space is unoccupied. |
Starting configuration for Egypt |
Your pieces cannot be moved or captured as a result of other players’ special abilities. The pharaoh can move as a king, but can instead choose to jump two squares diagonally (like an Italian bishop). |
Starting configuration for the Hunnic Empire |
On each of your turns, instead of moving a piece, you may instead choose to place an additional pawn into your starting area (any red square in the diagram below). However, you may not place pawns two turns in a row. |
Starting configuration for Scotland |
Your pieces cannot be moved as a result of other players’ special abilities. The Pict rook can move as a rook, but can also jump two or three squares horizontally or vertically. The Pict bishops can move as bishops, but can also jump two or three squares diagonally. However, you may not use either of these abilities two turns in a row. |
Starting configuration for the Barbarian Invaders |
Whenever one of your pieces captures an opponent’s piece, it may not be captured until it moves, or until three of your turns pass. However, it may not move unless another one of your pieces is within two squares of it. |
Starting configuration for the United States of America |
At the start of your turn, roll a (six-sided) die. If the die lands a 5 or 6, choose any other player. For the remainder of your turn, you can use that player’s special ability (that is, everything written here under that country, except of course the starting configuration). If the die lands a 3 or 4, roll again. If it lands a 1 or 2, you can “steal” the ability of the player clockwise from you, as outlined above. If it lands a 3 or 4, you can “steal” the ability of the player across from you. If it lands a 5 or 6, you can “steal” the ability of the player counterclockwise from you. In all cases, you may choose not to “steal” if you don’t want to. You may not the abilities of a country with special units (i.e. Sparta or the Carthagian Empire) or one that requires special setup (i.e. Terrorists or Spain). If the second roll gives you one of these countries, you may roll again. |
Starting configuration for the Soviet Union |
At the start of the game, mark one of your pieces in a way that won’t be seen by other players during the game (i.e. sticker on the bottom of the piece). The marked piece is your royal piece. Check and checkmate do not apply to the Soviets, but when your royal piece is captured, you lose the game. |
Starting configuration for Germany |
Once per game, you may take a group of your pieces that form a horizontally/vertically connected chain, and move the whole group of pieces anywhere on the board, as long as the pieces within the group have the same arrangement as before, and all the pieces are on unoccupied squares. You may not use a blitzkrieg to move a pawn to a square where it would promote. In the diagram at right, the red group of pieces can be moved into the position outlined in blue. |
Starting configuration for Israel |
At the end of your turn, you may choose any unoccupied square on the board and visibly mark it (i.e. with a counter or post-it note). Until the start of your next turn, non-royal pieces may not move into or through that square. |
Starting configuration for Iraq |
At the start of your turn, if any opponent’s piece (that isn’t royal – i.e. king) is horizontally or vertically adjacent to one of your pieces, remove it from the game. If your bishop and knight are ever within two squares of each other, immediately remove both of them from the game. |
Starting configuration for North Korea |
At the start of your turn, roll a (six-sided) die. If it lands a 1, 2, 3, or 4, your turn proceeds normally. However, if it lands a 5 or 6, do the following: First, roll another die. If it lands 1 or 2, you can move one piece this turn. 3 or 4: two pieces. 5 or 6: three pieces. Then select the piece(s) you wish to move. For each piece, roll a die. If it lands a 1, that piece moves and captures as a pawn this turn, 2 – knight, 3 – bishop, 4 – rook, 5 – queen, 6 – king. After this, you can move your piece(s), ending your turn. Even if a different piece is moving as a king, your actual king has to be checkmated for you to lose the game. Because insanity can prevent checkmate, checkmate is declared against you only after you roll the first die. |
Starting configuration for China |
When any opponent moves a piece, you may “censor” that move: move the piece back, and let that player redo his move, but the piece that was censored may not move that turn. Once you censor a move, you may not censor again until the end of your next turn. You may not censor moves for players that have three or less pieces. |
Starting configuration for Japan |
If any one of your pieces is the only piece of its kind on the board, that piece may move twice in one turn. However, if a piece’s first move results in a check, your turn automatically ends. |
Starting configuration for Terrorists |
At the start of the game, mark one of your pieces in a way that won’t be seen by other players during the game (i.e. sticker on the bottom of the piece). That piece is carrying a bomb. Each turn, instead of moving, you have the option of detonating the bomb. If you do, the piece carrying the bomb and all pieces horizontally, vertically, and diagonally adjacent to it are removed from the game. However, if the piece carrying the bomb is captured, then the bomb doesn’t detonate. |
Starting configuration for UN Peacekeepers |
Your bishops and rooks may only move up to three squares each turn. Your pawns may move one square in any direction each turn. Your pieces can only be captured within your 2x4 starting area, but you can only capture other pieces normally if they are within your 2x4 starting area. If an opponent’s piece cannot move, and at least one UN Peacekeeper is horizontally or vertically adjacent to it, that piece is captured. You cannot be checkmated normally because you do not have a king, but if any opponent moves at least three of his/her pieces into your starting area, you lose the game. |
Starting configuration for the Mafia |
Your pieces do not move when they capture other pieces. Your bishops and rooks may only move or capture up to three squares each turn. |
Starting configuration for Law Enforcement Agents |
Only your king and your pawns may capture, check, or checkmate enemy pieces. However, whenever another player’s piece is within the standard capturing zone of any of your pieces (but not pawns), that piece may not move. |
Coming soon!
Coming soon!
European Chess was developed and playtested by Alex Nisnevich, John Fritzen, Michael Fienberg, Neil Shah, Ben Pyle, and Joe Richman.
Special thanks to John Zimmerman, Bruce Moon (RIP), and the rest of the Bay Area Chess Club for designing ZM Machiavellian Chess, off of which this game is based.
Special thanks also to all the members of the Oak Park Chess Club (you know who you are!) =)
Finally, I would like to thank Peter Olotka and the Cosmic Encounter community. The boardgame Cosmic Encounter was my main source of inspiration for the different countries in European Chess.
Questions? Comments? Email us at alex.nisnevich@gmail.com.