This has been over with for decades. This is just a historical record now.
Introduction
In an email, on October 15, 1997, Eric Greenwood wrote:
I was in a creative mood tonight, so I just finished your birthday present
for next year! Want an early gift? :)
In a later email, he sent me a chess variant on 38 squares, which he
called Hans38 chess.
His inspiration came from the variants which were
made on the occasion of my 37th birthday, one of which Eric, I and two
others are currently playing. Now, as I'm still 37, and I hope to become
38 on April 21, 1998, this may be a little early, but because of this,
I had the following idea for a little competition.
The challenge
Design a chess variant on a board of exactly 38 squares.
The Rules of the Metagame
To participate, you design a game that is a chess variant and that
is played on a board of exactly 38 squares, and send the rules to Hans
Bodlaender, [email protected], before January 31, 1998 (which is the third
anniversary of The Chess Variant Pages.) If you cannot use email,
you can also send them on paper
to: Hans Bodlaender, [address removed].
With a submission, you can, if you want, also
include a few sample games, comments, etc.
Hans Bodlaender is `first round judge'. Submissions to the contest
that are not a chess variant, not a game, or are deemed unsuitable for
publication on the Chess Variant Pages for other reasons may be rejected in
this first round. Other submissions will be published on The Chess Variant
Pages. Also, the amount of submissions per participant might be limited.
With participating, you give me the formal rights to publish what you send
(or in edited form) on The Chess Variant Pages, and its offline versions.
Copyright remains with
the author, and you keep the right for publication elsewhere.
There will be a kind of voting, which will be done approximately from
February 1, 1998 till April 1, 1998. The winning game will be announced
on April 21, 1998. Everybody on the Internet will get a chance to vote.
The voting prodedure may depend on an assumption that people are fair.
(For instance, a page with some `vote' buttons might be made. One could
easily win by voting a multiple times for ones own design, but that would
be cheating; the contest is done under the assumption that everybody acts
fair. Alternatively, I might try to make some filter in an email program such
that voting is done by email.)
All variants (except those `refused by first round judging') will
be voted upon.
The winner receives (if he wants) the latest version of `The Chess
Variant Pages offline': most files of the website on floppy for offline
browsing, and a copy of John William Brown's book Meta-Chess.
Also, he receives the honours of being the `Winner of the 1st
Internet Chess Variant Design Contest'.
There is a second prize, which consists of the latest version of `The Chess Variant
Pages offline'.
If you submit more designs than one, please try to make them really
different from each other, and still keep it to very few submissions.
Mention games that have inspired you. Write correct English, and be
clear and complete in giving rules, but you may assume familarity with
the rules of standard chess. (For instance, you can write sentences like:
Knights move like in usual chess. The purpose of the game is to mate the
opponents General. Stalemated players lose the game.)
Additional rules
Coreldraw files used for drawing boards of the Chess Variant pages can be
obtained from Hans Bodlaender. You can use these files to draw your boards.
Alternatively, you can use other methods to draw the board, or use an ascii
representation of the board, as you wish. If sending pictures, use gif or
jpg-formats.
You may modify an entry, if you see improvements. Please do this only
once, e.g., in January. No changes after January 31, 1998.
What else?
If you have questions or concerns, write to Hans: [email removed].
A question was asked by George Jelliss, (editor of Variant Chess): how
literally should one take the notion `square', i.e., could squares also be
cells? (He mentioned a chess board, consisting of two hexagonal boards each
with 19 cells, which one get when the sides have length three.)
When writing `square', I was not thinking too literally at squares (in the
sense that there are geometric objects with four sides of equal length and
90-degree corners between the sides), and for me, `squares' with a shape,
different from a real square, i.e., cells, are also acceptable.
You can find more information, including the games submitted in the contest, and
information on a tournament where the games submitted are played from the index page on this tournament.
Comments.
Eric's birthday present for my 38th birthday was called Hans38 chess, and is
not a submission to the contest.
Eric made another submission to the contest; Ralph Betza also made a game
named Hans38 chess, which is a submission. However, I'm hoping to turn 38
in April 1998.
Inspiration for this kind of contest was obtained from John William
Brown's book Meta-Chess.
For more information, the submitted games, link to the `voting' page, see
the index page of this contest.
Written by Hans Bodlaender.
WWW page created: October 16, 1997. Last modified: February 6, 1998.