1.Bexb2+ Nxb2 2.Bxb2+ Kb1 3.Nxc3#
The Einstein-Rosen spot (II)
How do the d-e-f pawns get off the board in all these positions? They are stuck... they take one step and then there is the obstacle. Who would capture such a pawn?
By the way, isn't the black square really a black hole? And if so, wouldn't it have been natural to permit units to plunge into it and then simply disappear? That would have completed the metaphor. Also a great way to get rid of unwanted pawns blocking the lines and diagonals.
How do the d-e-f pawns get off the board in all these positions? They are stuck... they take one step and then there is the obstacle. Who would capture such a pawn?
why not? if you want to create a pass pawn on c or g file...e file pawns often falls because of the bridge
By the way, isn't the black square really a black hole? And if so, wouldn't it have been natural to permit units to plunge into it and then simply disappear? That would have completed the metaphor. Also a great way to get rid of unwanted pawns blocking the lines and diagonals.
The radical change derives from the fact that due to the bridges we can simultaneously have different times on the same chessboard.
D.Panagakos
https://centerless-chessboard.blogspot.gr/
Black to move and mate in 3