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Chess and domino
Message
From
12/04/2002 12:10:51
 
 
To
11/04/2002 19:20:17
Hilmar Zonneveld
Independent Consultant
Cochabamba, Bolivia
General information
Forum:
Games
Category:
Trivia
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00639375
Message ID:
00644375
Views:
12
>>>Take a chessboard, and remove two diagonally-opposite squares (for instance, remove the upper-right and the lower-left corner). This leaves 62 squares total. Can you cover these squares with 31 domino pieces? Each domino covers two adjacent squares.
>>>
>>>Hilmar.
>>
>>Remove squares from a chessboard?
>>
>>Heresy, I tell you!!!
>>
>>< grin >
>>
>>(from a chess hobbyist)
>
>Well, I am a chess enthusiast myself, but I also enjoy "alternative" chess - at least in theory, I didn't play much in practice. Examples of alternatives include hexagonal chess, 3-D chess (this turns out to be too confusing), cylindrical chess (normal chessboard, but pieces can go "over the edge" to the other side), and many more.
>
>Hilmar.

The only alternative chess I've played is where two-player teams play regular chess side by side, and the pieces captured by one teammate are put at the other teammate's game for his disposal.

The name escapes me, but it's sort of fun.
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