Pieces have the same movement as in orthodox chess, but they cannot
take other pieces in the usual way. Instead of the normal captures, pieces
can pull or push other pieces, potentially off the board.
The goal is to send the enemy king off the board.
Each turn, a player has the following options:
Move one of his pieces normally, then optionally pull something as an
effect of this move.
Push any piece with one of his pieces, then optionally follow the pushed
piece.
It seems easier to understand with some examples. For a detailed
introduction please visit
this page
(in French).
The e2 pawn can move to e3 and e4 as usual. It can also slide diagonally,
being pushed by the bishop or the queen (which may or may not move along
this line afterward). It can also go to c3, being pushed by the knight from
g1; then the knight can move to e2, or stay motionless.
Finally, the pawn can "take the king": this is a special move indicating that
you want it to exit the board. Indeed it could be pushed off the board by the
bishop or the queen.
Note: if an action is possible but you don't want to play a second part in
a move, click on any empty square: this will send an empty move.
Pawns cannot pull (because they only move forward).
When they could reach the square beyond the edge,
pieces can exit the board by themselves, possibly dragging another piece
out (friendly or enemy).
It is forbidden to undo a "move + action". For example here, white could
push back the black bishop on g7 but not return to d4 then.