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  2. Chess on a really big board - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chess_on_a_really_big_board

    Chess on a really big board was created as an outgrowth of Betza's ideas on three-dimensional chess, after he noted that an 8×8×8 board for 3D chess would have 512 spaces, more than any large version of chess that had previously been invented; he then considered two-dimensional very large (or, in his word, "huge") chess games, mainly on the ...

  3. Dubrovnik chess set - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dubrovnik_chess_set

    The chess box was felted with a metallic badge on the inside of the box with the inscription "IX. šah olimpijada Dubrovnik, Jugoslavija." [4] The box was unusually large, featuring 60 millimetres (2.4 in) squares. Approximately 50 chess sets were made with original sets being very rare if not impossible to locate or buy. [4]

  4. Tamerlane chess - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tamerlane_chess

    Because Tamerlane chess is a larger variant of chaturanga, it is also called Shatranj Al-Kabir (Large chess or Great chess), as opposed to Shatranj as-saghir ("Small Chess"). Although the game is similar to modern chess, [ 2 ] it is distinctive in that there are varieties of pawn , each of which promotes in its own way.

  5. List of chess variants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_chess_variants

    Omega chess: On a 10×10 board with four extra squares, one per corner. Includes the champion and wizard fairy pieces. Both are leapers, with different ways of leaping. Rhombic Chess: Uses a hex-shaped board comprising 72 rhombus cells. Normal set of chess pieces move edgewise or pointwise. Checkmate objective as usual.

  6. Taikyoku shogi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taikyoku_shogi

    The game was created around the mid-16th century (presumably by priests) and is based on earlier large board shogi games. Before the rediscovery of taikyoku shogi in 1997, tai shogi was believed to be the largest physically playable chess variant ever. It has not been shown that taikyoku shogi was ever widely played.

  7. Tai shogi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tai_shogi

    Tai shogi (泰将棋 tai shōgi or 無上泰将棋 mujō tai shōgi "grand chess", renamed from 無上大将棋 mujō dai shōgi "supreme chess" to avoid confusion with 大将棋 dai shōgi) is a large board variant of shogi (Japanese chess). The game dates to the 15th century and is based on earlier large-board shogi games.

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