The River Board Tag
Description
These games have the board divided by a border that serves some role in the game. In Xiangqi, this border is called a river. It divides the board into two equal halves. Some pieces cannot cross it, and some gain extra powers of movement upon crossing it.
Tagged Pages
Ajax Xiangqi. The Ajax 'effect' meets Chinese Chess. (9x10, Cells: 90) (1)
Banner Xiangqi. Xiangqi with Banners (from the Game of Three Kingdoms) and simplified endgame rules. (1)
Catapults of Troy. Large variant with a river, catapults, archers, and trojan horses! (8x11, Cells: 88) (1)
Chak. A modern vision of what a Mayan chess would look like. (1)
Eurasian Chess. Synthesis of European and Asian forms of Chess. (10x10, Cells: 100) (1)
Five Tigers. A Chinese Chess variant with unequal armies. (9x10, Cells: 90) (1)
Jurassic Chess. Game with unusual movements, a river, and bridges. (9x9, Cells: 81) (1)
Storm the Ivory Tower. A Smess adaptation of Chinese Chess. (9x10, Cells: 90) (1)
Xiang Hex. Missing description (9x7, Cells: 79) (1)
Xiangqi 42. A minature version of Xiangqi (Chinese Chess) on 42 squares. (7x6, Cells: 42) (1)
Xiangqi: Chinese Chess. Links and rules for Xiangqi (Chinese Chess). (9x10, Cells: 90) (Recognized!) (1)
ZhamengQi. XiangQi with Grasshoppers. (9x10, Cells: 90) (1)
Parents
None.