Smegi combines elements of Smess and Shogi in a game that is more sophisticated than Smess but less sophisticated than Shogi. The board and the game pieces come from Smess. Smess is normally played on a 7x8 board. By removing two files from the Smess board, I made a 40 square board for Smegi. The files I removed were the b and f files. I also switched the a and g files to keep the board checkered.
![]() | The Brain moves one space in any direction the arrows point. It may not move into check. |
![]() | The Ninny moves one space in any direction the arrows point. |
![]() | The Numskull moves in a straight line any distance in any direction the arrows on its starting square point. The Numskull moves like a Queen except that the arrows determine which directions it can move. |
The pieces are colored Blue and Red. The setup goes like this:
I have also prepared some image files you can print out and use as a board. There is a color image for color printers and a greyscale image for black and white printers. I recommend loading the image into a graphics program, such as Ultimate Paint, and printing it out with a "Stretch to Fit" option, or its equivalent, selected. This will rescale the image to cover most of the space on a sheet of paper.
If you don't have the option of loading the image into a graphics program first, which may be the case if you don't have your own computer, you may use the browser to print out a board. The image will print out in different sizes on different printers, and I cannot control what size it will print out for you. But to help you get a large enough board, I have included pages which show the board at different degrees of magnification. Look at each one with "Print Preview" and print the one which best fits the whole page.
If you have a Smess set, you can use the pieces from that. Otherwise, you might use Pawns for Ninnies, Rooks for Numskulls, and Kings for Brains. If you use Smess or Chess pieces, you should have extra pieces available. When a player captures a piece, you will need to switch it with the same piece of your own color.
Another possibility is to use reversible pieces, such as cardboard Shogi style pieces. These could be reversible by the shape alone, as Shogi pieces are, or have Blue and Red images on alternate sides.
I have recently improved the Zillions script for Smegi, so that the computer now plays considerably better than it used to. When you have pieces off the board, you will notice that you're only allowed to drop one of the Numskulls and one of the Ninnies. This is to reduce the number of moves Zillions has to generate, and it has no real effect on what moves you can make, since dropping one Ninny or Numskull is the same as dropping any other. A few seconds thinking time may now be sufficient to get Zillions to play a challenging game.