The fourth World Champion Alexander Alekhine considered in 1933 that chess did not need any changes at the time, but that combining "the best features" of the Asian varieties of chess with Western chess "would be a more natural evolution than adding new squares and pieces, or some of the other changes that have been proposed". However, this consideration seems confused about what "the best features” of Xiangqi and Shogi, the big two Asian varieties of chess, actually are. Both draw less frequently than Western chess not just because stalemate is a win, but also because the Pawns can’t blockade each other at all.
Canalejas Long Checker Chess
Additional context: Juan García Canalejas was a Spanish mathematician who published the first attested description of the “coup du fondeur des cloches”.
The board is 10x8 because the new pieces are the common long checker kings crowned with the chess King moves: the Senator being the orthogonal piece and the Judge being the diagonal piece. However, they may only capture once per turn. Alternatively, they may use approach capture as in Fanorona, or even both modalities. In this case, they may only capture two pieces in a turn when they do not land multiple
The fourth World Champion Alexander Alekhine considered in 1933 that chess did not need any changes at the time, but that combining "the best features" of the Asian varieties of chess with Western chess "would be a more natural evolution than adding new squares and pieces, or some of the other changes that have been proposed". However, this consideration seems confused about what "the best features” of Xiangqi and Shogi, the big two Asian varieties of chess, actually are. Both draw less frequently than Western chess not just because stalemate is a win, but also because the Pawns can’t blockade each other at all.
Canalejas Long Checker Chess
Additional context: Juan García Canalejas was a Spanish mathematician who published the first attested description of the “coup du fondeur des cloches”.
The board is 10x8 because the new pieces are the common long checker kings crowned with the chess King moves: the Senator being the orthogonal piece and the Judge being the diagonal piece. However, they may only capture once per turn. Alternatively, they may use approach capture as in Fanorona, or even both modalities. In this case, they may only capture two pieces in a turn when they do not land multiple