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d1be8046 BA |
1 | p.boxed |
2 | | Any piece guarded by a friendly knight can also move like a knight. | |
3 | ||
4 | p. | |
2c5d7b20 BA |
5 | In addition to its normal abilities, a piece guarded by a knight can move |
6 | like him. On the following diagram, 1.Nf4 would checkmate because it guard | |
7 | the g6 queen. If it is black to play, then 1...Rxe2 is possible due to the | |
8 | c8 knight. | |
d1be8046 BA |
9 | |
10 | figure.diagram-container | |
11 | .diagram | |
12 | | fen:7k/8/6Q1/1n6/8/2r5/4N3/K7: | |
13 | ||
8055eabd | 14 | p. |
2c5d7b20 BA |
15 | A pawn on the sixth rank guarded by a knight could thus make a knight move to |
16 | reach the last rank and promote. | |
8055eabd BA |
17 | |
18 | p These oddities excepted, orthodox rules apply. | |
19 | ||
d1be8046 BA |
20 | h3 Source |
21 | ||
22 | p | |
2c5d7b20 BA |
23 | | The original rule invented by Mannis Charosh (1972) is described for |
24 | | example | |
8055eabd | 25 | a(href="https://www.chessvariants.com/diffmove.dir/nrelay.html") on this page |
2c5d7b20 BA |
26 | | . However, I don't really like the invulnerability condition and the |
27 | | restrictions imposed in these rules, so I implemented this simpler version. |