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Please clarify if you read this and know the answer.
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<i>The new pieces, the Archbishop (moving as either a Bishop or Knight) and the Chancellor (moving as either a Rook or Knight) are placed next to the Queen side and King side Rooks</i>
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Are the new pieces the outermost pieces in the array, or do they go between rook and knight?
You can see the initial setup on the PBM preset page for Aberg's variation <a href='http://play.chessvariants.com/pbm/play.php?submit=Preview&game=Aberg+variation+of+Capablanca+Chess&rules=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.chessvariants.com%2Flarge.dir%2Fcapablancavariation.html&group=Chess&set=alfaerie&board=10.01.&code=ranbqkbnmrpppppppppp40PPPPPPPPPPRANBQKBNMR&patterns=%3A+%21*&cols=10&colors=339933+CCCC11+22BB22&hexcolors=red+green+blue+orange+yellow+indigo+violet+cyan+magenta+black&player=White&first=White&files=&ranks=&bcolor=111199&tcolor=EEEE22&bsize=16&shape=square'>here</a> The new pieces go between the rooks and knights.
Hans Aberg has provided a very nice graphic showing the setup. --Ed.
This reproduces EXACTLY the starting position of Carrera's variation of some four hundred years ago.
I just compared this game with Carrera's Chess at http://www.chessvariants.com/historic.dir/carrera.html and found that this game does not exactly match the starting position of Carrera's Chess. It is in fact the mirror image of Carrera's Chess. The difference is that the two new pieces have reversed positions in this game.
All the same, this game has more affinity to Carrera's game than to Capablanca's, to the point that it might more correctly be called 'Aberg's variation of Carrera's Chess'.
Since I'm working on updating my Chess,_Large.zrf file today, I was paying more attention to the various games in it, and I started tripping up over Aberg's variation. In this ZRF, which I originally wrote in 1998, I implemented both Aberg's variation, or what I thought was his variation, and a Capablanca variation of my own. When I originally wrote the ZRF, this page did not exist, and I based my ZRF on the description which is now at http://www.chessvariants.org/misc.dir/chessmods.html I've just noticed that this old description has a contradiction in it. The text description places the Chancellor on the Queen's side and the Archbishop on the King's side, but the diagram reverses this. I based the ZRF on the diagram, and my own Capablanca variation just reversed the positions of Chancellor and Archbishop. Since this page agrees with the old text and not with the old diagram, I take it that my variation was actually Aberg's variation. Furthermore, Pritchard's description of Carrera's Chess contradicts the description on this website. Pritchard points out that Murray reversed the names of the Champion and Centaur, and our page on Carrera's Chess was based on John Gollon, who probably got his information from Murray. I trust Pritchard more than Gollon or Murray, and so I take his description of the game as more authoritative. Therefore, it appears that Carrera's Chess, Aberg's Capablanca variation, and my Capablanca variation all have the same setup. It looks like my least original variant ever is even less original than I thought it was. :)
All three variations keep the relative order between the old chess pieces, keeping the positions of the rooks at the sides, and the queen and the king at the center, with the white queen to the left. The board colors are such that the white queen ends up on a white square. All three variations agree that the weaker of the two new pieces, the Archbishop, moving as a Bishop or a Knight, should be at the Queen side, and that the stronger piece, the Chancellor, moving as a Rook or Knight, should be at the King side. This seems natural, as the Queen side is already stronger in Orthodox Chess, thus balancing up the King side somewhat. Bird put the new pieces next to the King, Capa between the Knights and Bishops, and I suggested that they should be put next to the Rooks. I think the preferred positioning may depend on playing style: The more 'rough' it is, the more one might want to have the new pieces to the center. I like the Fianchetto where the Bishops point towards the center four squares, and I want the light pieces early into the game, as is customary playing in Orthodox Chess, therefore, I want the new, heavier pieces out of the way in the earliest stages of the opening game. In addition, widening the board I think will cause that too much moves are spent on castling preparations. Therefore I suggested an Enhanced Castling rule. The other variations do not have that, but those variations can be played with or without it.
Going on the assumption that Hans Aberg gets notified whenever a new comment is added to this page, let me mention here that I have now released a Zillions Rules File that plays Aberg's Capablanca variation. Unlike the ZRF I originally released years ago, this one gets the setup correct, and it implements free castling. There is a link to it just above the comments section.
'ABCLargeCV': An important family of chesses, a crowded art(because 50-100 instances extant), Aberg's is a left-right reflection of the original 17th century Carrera's. 'H.E.Bird had made an earlier variation(50 yrs. before) of Capablanca Chess.' And Chinese alchemists made gunpowder 500 yrs. before it was invented in 14th century Europe. Seriously, extreme free castling, where Rook ends up not necessarily even adjacent to King, makes sense. Carrera's and Aberg's spread out the compounds maximally whilst keeping Rooks at familiar corners. Piece-value table shows Bishop ahead of Knight on 8x10 though still close.
I've been playing a few games of Embassy Chess on BrainKing and have found that castling is something that is to be kept open and not used. Once you castle your opponent is on you unless you've done it to where he can't do much. This free castling would be a whole different kind of deal though. Castling in Embassy Chess is like the other games where the King moves three squares and the Rook is put on the other side. The King is a usefull piece in the center of the board if he's safe. Getting the Rooks out is still a problem, but there's ways to do it if you purposely plan on not castling. Embassy Chess with free castling would almost be like playing Grand Chess on a 10 × 8 board.
Just thought that I would mention Chancellor Chess (Book), which reprints the first part of Ben Foster's 1889 book, including a 'GIF' of the original diagram illustrating the interesting RNBQKCNBR setup for both players. This places Bishops on both light and dark squares on the 9x9 board.
Note that the piece values given on this page are not empirical values at all, but theoretical values: they are derived from the way the piece moves, and comparison with known values for another game (8x8 Chess) for pieces that move likewise. Empirical values are values that are derived from win probabilities (as derived by statistical analysis of games) from positions with material imbalance. I have played and analyzed many thousands of such games, using my engine Joker80 (currently the best free WinBoard-compatible 10x8 engine) in self play, and I can vouch for the fact that the piece values given here are no good. The true values are: P=85, N=300, B=350 (pairBonus=40), R=475, A=875, C=900, Q=950. Note in particular that there is no significant difference in value between A and C, and that A+P on the average lightly beats Q. The P=85 is for a Pawn in the initial position; a healthy Pawn in the center, or a passer, are of course worth much more, a backward or edge Pawn much less.
CRC practical attack values http://www.symmetryperfect.com/shots/values-capa.pdf Although Aberg's method of estimating the relative piece values for CRC pieces upon the 10 x 8 board was just an expedient extrapolation from established relative pieces values for FRC pieces upon the 8 x 8 board, his values are actually more accurate than yours. One major flaw in your system is approximately equating the values of the archbishop and the chancellor. This is a radical contention which implies that the values of the rook and bishop are equal (since the archbishop equals a knight plus a bishop and the chancellor equals a knight plus a rook). This is inconsistent with your own system internally whereby the rook is (correctly) ascribed a higher value than the bishop.
Values given for P N B R Q K are just the empirical values used before the days of computer programs, with an adjustment of the traditional B = 3, mostly used as a point of departure, and how to figure out how material in the long run would balance out. They also depend on position and the skill of the player, for example, knights weaken in closed positions, and weaker player might over-value them. I just put them up as a starting point so your analysis is welcome. The surprising closeness of the A and C values you get perhaps depends on the fact that A, unlike B, can move on squares of both colors. Pawns (just as knight) ought to weaken on large boards. So another pawn rule might be that it is allowed to move two steps if it has not reached the two middle rows (i.e., a pawn that has moved one square can still make a two-square move). Also, you might try to figure out the strength of a piece that can move as a queen and a knight. Call this piece say 'General' or G. One might use an 12x8 board. One setup might be (white pieces) R C N B A Q K G B N C R It is derived by imposing the condition that all pawns are protected by a quality piece in the start position.
To Derek: If Archbishop and Chancellor have equal value, it DOES NOT IMPLY ANYTHING for the value difference of Rook vs Bishop. They are all different pieces, and have nothing to do with each other. In real life the value of a piece is not the sum of the value of each of its individual moves, but also depends critically on properties like mating potential, color-boundedness, forwardness, speed, manoeuvrability, concentration, sensitivity to blocking. See the considerations of Ralph Betza. In particular, as to the R-B vs C-A difference: A Rook has mating potential, a Bishop not. But: A Chancellor has mating potential, and so does an Archbishop. A Rook can stray on all colors, a Bishop can only access half the board. But: A Chancellor can stray on all colors, and so can an Archbishop. Theoretical considerations like you refer to are just nonsense, with no connection to real life. Elaborate nonsense, admittedly, but nonsense nevertheless. No amount of _talk_ will increase the value of a Chancellor versus an Archbishop. Only what happens on the board counts. And on the board A+P beats C (in the presence of other material, between equal players) by a sizable margin (like 60-40). Just like B+P is no match for a Rook, in the presence of enough other material. If you consider that 'flawed', because the fact that R is more valuable than B+P 'implies' that C is more valuable than A+P, to be 'consistent', then I wonder what your concept of piece value really means. What would you rather have (if you can choose to make a trade or not), a piece that is more 'valuable' accoording to some contrived reasoning, or a piece that gives you a larger probability to win the game? If it is the latter, you should use the piece values I give, and not the 'more correct' ones of Aberg. In real life A performs nearly as well as C in almost any combination of material, and B gets crushed by R in almost any combination of material except the sterile KRKB ending.
Theoretical considerations are not nonsense but must tempered by empirical experimentation. Below is my theoretical analysis of C vs A situation. First let's take the following values: R: 4.5 B: 3 N: 3 Now the bishop is a slider so should have greater value then knight, but it is color bound so it gets a penalty by decreasing its value by a third, which reduce it to that of the knight. When Bishop is combined with Knight, the piece is no longer color bound so the bishop component gets back to its full strength (4.5), which is rookish. As a result Archbishop and Chancellor become similar in value.
First I want to stress that the B-N value difference is dependent on board size: on 8x8 they are roughly equal, while on 10x8 the difference is half a Pawn. (In addition there is half a Pawn bonus for having a pair of oppositely colored Bishops. So in these Capablanca-type variants, giving N+P to break the opponent's B-pair is an equal trade.) This increased B-N difference is not due to the Knight being weaker, but to the Bishop being stronger! B+N+N vs Q, (in an otherwise full 10x8 opening setup) is about equal, and the three minors beat the Queen by about half the Pawn-odds score if the Bishop is part of a pair. B(paired)+P vs R in the opening turns out to be an equal trade. My guess is that the wider board makes the Bishop relatively more valuable: its forward moves now attack the opponent usually in two places, while on 8x8 one move usually ends on the side edge of the board. I noticed this in an even more extreme way in Cylinder Chess, where the board is effectively infinitely wide. A Cylinder Bishop (B*) amongst normal Chess pieces is aworth a full Pawn more than a normal Bishop. R*-R is only about a quarter Pawn. The lateral over-the-edge attacks are comparatively worthless. Q*-Q, otoh, is about 2 Pawns. Strangely enough, the explanation that the Knight move of Archbishop breaks color-boundedness does not seem to fully explain the large synergy between B and N moves. I tried a piece that moved as B+P (so one extra forward non-capture step), which broke color-boundedness, but it hardly gave any advantage over a normal B (about 1/6 Pawn) A Dragon horse (B+K), however, is slightly stronger than R+P. But of course adding the K moves (or Wazir moves, really) both as capttures and non-captures also endows it with mating potential. My current guess is that breaking of color-boundedness and mating potential help a little to bridge the narrowed gap between R and B on a 10x8 board, but that the major contribution comes from the enhanced close-range manouvrability and concentration of attack power: an Archbishop covers several 2x2 blocks. Such contiguous attacked areas seem to be very valuable, and is likely to be also an important factor determining the value of the Bishop pair (because Bishops on bordering diagonals also covering a lot of contiguous squares).
'If Archbishop and Chancellor have equal value, it DOES NOT IMPLY ANYTHING for the value difference of Rook vs Bishop. They are all different pieces, and have nothing to do with each other.' YES it does according to my model and every quality, holistic model built upon a proper foundation I have ever seen. Contrary to your statement, I think it obvious to any logical person that the component pieces have at least SOMETHING to do with their composite pieces. Some computer chess programmers are notorious for achieving useful relative piece values that are within decent range of their optimums based purely upon AI playing strength without creating any coherent, fully-developed theory that is logically explained, justified and consistent. Unfortunately, such people contribute little to the understanding of relative piece values for themselves or other interested parties. I have appr. two years of experience working with Reinhard Scharnagl's excellent SMIRF program, my fast dual-CPU server and choice Capablanca chess variants. Reinhard Scharnagl would compiled two, otherwise-identical versions of his program using his and my favorite sets of relative piece values (at that time) which would played against one another using a great amount of time per move. Eventually, we carefully completed many games this way. We would both analyze the game results and discuss conclusions. Sometimes we would agree. Sometimes we would disagree. Subsequent tests would settle disagreements ... sometimes. In this manner, we both improved our models over time until we reached a point where any further minor improvements became prohibitively difficult to achieve within a survivable time frame. 'In real life the value of a piece is not the sum of the value of each of its individual moves ...' YES it is although not exactly. The moves of component pieces of a composite piece have far more effect upon determining its relative piece value than ALL other factors added together. '... but also depends critically on properties like mating potential, color-boundedness, forwardness, speed, manoeuvrability, concentration, sensitivity to blocking.' I have also read ALL of the pioneering works of Betza on the subject. Essentially, my model mathematicized a subject (to the extent possible present day) he had only speculatively verbalized. Rest assured, my model makes quantitative adjustments for all non-trivial, effecacious factors to relative piece values that I know of with certainty. You need to read and thoroughly understand my 58-page paper on the subject. universal calculation of piece values http://www.symmetryperfect.com/shots/calc.pdf 'Theoretical considerations like you refer to are just nonsense, with no connection to real life.' The connection of my model to 'real life' is very strong. My theory was adjusted and refined numerous times to comply with game results over different piece sets and game boards. Experience dictated the details of the theory in accordance with the scientific method. 'What would you rather have (if you can choose to make a trade or not), a piece that is more 'valuable' according to some contrived reasoning, or a piece that gives you a larger probability to win the game?' Both. Under a proper model, they should not be mutually exclusive at all. In fact, they should be in agreement ... until a point in the endgame where checkmate becomes possible. Be mindful that significant differences in relative piece values between the opening game, mid-game and endgame (to the limited extent that they are applicable) are accommodated under sophisticated models. ____________________________________________ See the published values of Ed Trice and Reinhard Scharnagl for CRC pieces upon the 10 x 8 board. http://www.gothicchess.com/piece_values.html In addition to the published values of Hans Aberg and Derek Nalls, this verifies that it is beyond dispute that your published values for the archbishop and chancellor are radical. Your radical contention that an archbishop and a chancellor have appr. equal relative piece values requires an especially sound theoretical framework to be convincing. Instead, all I am receiving from you is piecemeal descriptions of endgame scenarios where material values are likely to disappear and become meaningless compared to positional values (i.e., checkmate achievable regardless of material sacrifices) and consequently, conclusions drawn are likely to be faulty.
FYI: Smirf falls way behind Joker80 in any real-life tournament played so far. See, for instance, the Battle of the Goths Championship 2008, which is currently playing at http://80.100.28.169/gothic/battle.html . And the main reason it does so is because it loses many points against engines in the lower part of the ranking. If you would look at the games (they can be downloaded from the mentioned page) you see the same pattern over and over again: Smirf voluntarily engages in losing trades, thinking it is +4 or +5 ahead, and subsequently is slaughtered by the weaker opponent because its piece material simply cannot keep up with the opponents overwhelming force, even if wielded by a less competent player. So I would say using Smirf in connection with piece values is a particularly bad example. As for your scientific method, you seem to forget that science is about explaining observed FACTS. So if your 'coherent, logical, consistent' theory predicts that A is of nearly equal value as B+N, while in practice the B+N have a losing disadvantage, I would say the World would was better off without it. A theory not explaining the facts can at most contribute to MISunderstanding of relative piece values... The ones who determine the facts through accurate measurement thus contribute in an absolutely essential way to our understanding, as without such facts the theoreticians cannot even start their work. Your 'understanding' of piece values is such that you consider piece values that do have C-A different from R-B 'flawed'. I.e., to be flawless in your eyes, a theory would have to predict that two pieces which perform equally (C and A) have to be assigned values that differ by several Pawns, or pieces that differ by several Pawns in strength (R and B) to be assigned a value that is equal. Why would I read a 58-page monologue from someone adhering to such flawed logic? It can only be a waste of time. And the FACT that C offers no significant advantage over A in Capablanca Chess games won't go away by it...
'Also, you might try to figure out the strength of a piece that can move as a queen and a knight. Call this piece say 'General' or G. One might use an 12x8 board. One setup might be (white pieces) R C N B A Q K G B N C R It is derived by imposing the condition that all pawns are protected by a quality piece in the start position.' I prefer to call this piece 'Amazon': the name 'General' is already taken by several Shogi pieces, where the various brands of Generals are all more or less handicapped Kings. Furthermore, Ferz means 'General', and indeed can be described as a handicapped King. Although in English one uses the Persian name for this piece (like for the Rook), most other languages don't, and overloading the name 'General' would cause problems in translation. That being said: I ran a preliminary test for determining the Amazon value (on a slow laptop, as my main PC is tied up in running the 'Battle of the Goths' Championship), by playing games where one side had an Amazon in stead of Q+N. I did this on 10x8 from the Capablanca setup (removing the Queen's Knight and replacing Queen by Amazon), because there the piece values are accurately known. I did not want to use 12x8, because I have no piece values there for the pieces against which I would compare the Amazon. After 116 games, the Amazon is leading by 51.3% (52+ 49- 15=). The statistical error over 116 games is 4.3%, though, so this difference with equality if far below significance. At these settings (40/2' on a 1.3GHz Pentium-M) the Pawn-odds score is about 62%, so the observed difference corresponds to 10cP +/- 35cP. It thus seems there is hardly any synergy between Q and N moves, and the values simply add. In other words, Q is already so powerful that it doesn't really need the Knight moves, and they provide little 'extra' in terms of making it possible to use the moves it already had more efficiently. To make this a hard conclusion, though, I would have to play better quality games (either 40/5', or 4/2' on my 2.4GHz Core 2 Duo), as the current setting is at the brink of underestimating the Knight because of lack of depth in the end-game to use it efficiently, play at least 400 of them, try sevral other piece combinations (e.g. also against C+B and A+B) and average over a few different opening setups. That would take a few days when I have my C2D machine available again.
A short remark on piece values: first, my published model is not my last word, I still am working on that. As I have stated already an amount of time ago, piece values are depending from the percentage of emptyness of the board. It concerns the mobility value part of sliding pieces. This would lead to dynamic piece values of sliding pieces slowly growing through a game. SMIRF unfortunately is far away from that. Then I modified my thoughts on the nature of a bishop pair value bonus, which in fact had not been implemented in SMIRF yet at all. Errornously I derived that value modification from the fact, that a Bishop can reach merely one half of a board. But this is only a legal but misleading view on that strange effect. Today I am relating this paradoxon to the hideability of pieces more valued than a Bishop. Thus there is a chance to positionally devalue an opposite single Bishop by moving ones big pieces preferred on squares coloured oppositely to the Bishop's one. But that view demands the value bonus not to be applied statically by summing up piece values and such a bonus, but by writing an appropriate positional detail evaluation (as I have done intuitively in SMIRF). To try to find out piece values by having teams of different armies fighting each other seems to be very promising at a first sight. But as you see in those huge table bases: a lot of optimal play is done pure combinatorically and could end contrarily, if placing one piece only a step aside. Thus it is hard to understand why to densly relate outcomes of a games and piece values. In an extreme constellation having King+Knight against King (which is a draw anyway) such an approach would lead to the conclusion, that a Knight is valued to nothing.
I agree that statistics from tablebases is very hard to interpret: more than half the wins are usually tactical positions where pieces are hanging, so that the outcome has nothing to do with the piece makeup in question at all. But this is a consequence of the inclusion of tactical initial positions in the data set. The approximately 20,000 games I played to extract the piece values given below were all played from tactically dead positions (CRC-like opening positions, with some selected pieces deleted), where it would take several moves to attack an enemy piece in the first place. Note that I never played pieces in isolation (which could lead to the KNK effect you mention), but always in a nearly full opening setup (34 or more Chess men on the board). As to the dependence of piece values on the fill fraction on the board: one would only experience this effect to its full extent if the filling fraction remained constant during the game (as in Crazyhouse, where indeed the piece values are totally different from normal Chess). In games without piece drops, the board will unavoidably get empty. So you will have to plan to the future. It is true that in the early middle-game a Bishop is much more dangerous than a Rook, (which, without open files, is almost completely useless), but the difference is not so large that you can gain enough material to neutralize the end-game-value difference before the board gets empty enough that the advantage reverses. So it is still the end-game value that dominates the piece value early on. The instantaneous value tells you only the direction of a small correction that has to be applied, and is very volatile.
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