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Clear explanations, excellent site with all the information I required. Congratulations and thank you. I think I have spotted one minor error. I think that there is an error with the last diagram which shows the moves: The path of the lower white castle should go over the far to squares of the movable/attach board, not the nearest two as shown. Many thanks, Norman
I have added a couple more pictures from the third episode of the well-done fan-series Star Trek Continues.
WOW. I had never heard of Star Trek Continues. I just watched the first episode and was blown away! It's incredible that a compeltely ameture production was able to look that good and fit the style and feel of the original series so perfectly. And the story was excellent. If it continues at this quality level, it will definitely surpass the quality of the original series (which, although ground-breaking for the time, had a ton of very marginal episodes.)
Where can it be found? I could enjoy it, too no idea that people on this website like star trek but in retrsopective it seems likely :)!
Just a small update on the post by Jaymes. Taking the picture shown in the article for the starting position, the left hand side is the Queens side and the right hand side is the Kings side. The Kings and Queens should be on the movable levels next to the Rooks (or Castles). The back rank on the top and bottom levels should have the Knights at each side with the two Bishops on the centre ranks. At least, this is the setup shown in the pamphlet I got with my official Star Trek Tridimensional Chess Set almost 30 years ago.
Hi There! Ganine's Gothic chess pieces were indeed used on the original series. You can see them in The Naked Time, and Day of the Dove. I believe there may be other instances. I can tell you that Star Trek Continues would never have use Chess pieces that were not authentic. Loved your article. - Doug Drexler
Thanks for the information. I looked through the scenes in these two episodes, and I found the Gothic set in "The Naked Time," but I could not find any scene with 3D Chess in "Day of the Dove." Curiously, both episodes had Sulu wielding a sword.
According to the the World Tri Dimensional Chess Federation's rules, the starting positions illustrated here are quite correct. As they were originally created by a military fighter pilot, to help teach aerial combat tactics, in a three dimensional space, aren't they more pertinent to the original idea of 3D chess in Star Trek?
Franz Joseph admitted he wasn't really a chess player, so the Bartmess starting positions lack any real integrity.
I'd be interested in anyone else's thoughts on this.
The premise for tri dimensional chess set's presence on federation star ships was to teach three dimensional combat tactics, which is something the Bartmess and Meder rules patently fail to do, by blocking circumventing moves.
The rules presented here, on chess variants, are not complete and lack rules for castling but also advocate inverted attack boards, which, if nothing else, are highly impractical.
Not only were the World Tri Dimensional Chess Federation rules written by a fighter pilot, to teach three dimensional aerial combat, which is more in keeping with the original theme, they also start the king and queen in the centre files and provide the most reasonable method for castling, as the attached images demonstrate.
King's side castling
Queen's side castling
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