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AGES:
8+
PLAYERS:
2
EQUIPMENT:
16 white & 16 black chess pieces, game board
SET-UP:
Lots are drawn to establish who has the white chessmen and, thus, who
can move first. This player is then allotted the 16 white chess pieces and the other
player the 16 black chess pieces. The board is positioned so that each player
has a dark corner square on his left. The rooks are positioned on the two corner
squares to the left and right. Next to these come the two knights, one on the left
and one on the right. Next to these come the two bishops and in the center, the
queen and king. The white queen is always positioned on a light square and the
black queen on a dark square. The eight pawns are then placed adjacently in the
second row in front of these chess pieces.
GAME PLAY:
The pawns can only move forward. For the first advance from its
initial square on the second rank, the pawn has the option of moving one or two
squares, but thereafter may move only one square at a time. The rook moves only
on the ranks and files any distance and the bishop moves only on the diagonals.
The queen can move in any direction. The knights are the only pieces which are
able to change direction during the course of a move and “jump over” one’s own
or one’s opponent’s pieces; a knight takes one step of one single square along
the file or rank and then, still moving away from the square that it has left, takes
one step along the diagonal. The king may move in any direction, one step at a
time.
All pieces start from the pawns in the normal direction of movement described
above. However, the pawns which normally only move in a straight line, may only
capture diagonally to the front, left or right and only while moving forward. It is
not obligatory to capture your opponent. If the king is threatened, check must be
given (the player must declare check). The opponent is then obliged to protect
his king by moving the king to another square or moving one or his own pieces
between it and the threatening token or capturing the opposing attacker. If he is
unable to make any of the above moves, the king is said to be checkmated and
the game ends is favor of the opponent.
CASTLING:
Castling is a compound move of the king and one rook (formally
called ‘castle) that may be made, if at all, only once in a game. It is legal if neither
the king nor the rook has yet moved. If all the squares between them on the rank
are vacant, and no adverse piece commands two squares nearest the king on
the side on which castling is to be carried out, and if the king is not in check. The
move is executed by moving the king two squares towards the rook and then
placing the rook on the square passed over by the king.
INSTRUCTIONS