A human could probably beat a really dumb bot opponent that just made every move as soon as it became available, but I think as soon as the bot had any real sense of strategy the game would be broken - humans just can't focus on all 32 pieces simultaneously at that pace.
The Piececlopedia: Berolina Pawn Historic remarks The Berolina Pawn has been introduced by E. Nebermann in 1926. The pawn is named after the city of Berlin. It is one of the most popular fairy chess pieces, because its movement rules are a logical twist of the rules for the pawn. Movement rules Berolina paws can only move forward. When a Berolina pawn makes a non-capturing move, it goes one square diagonally forwards. When a Berolina pawn is still on its original square on the second row, it can make a non-capturing move diagonally forwards of one or of two squares - if it moves two squares, the first square must be empty. A pawn captures one square vertically forwards. When a Berolina pawn has moved two squares forwards, the opponent has the possibility to take it en passant: in the directly following turn a (Berolina) pawn of the opponent may take it also on the square that was passed by. When a Berolina pawn reaches a promotion square, that is, a square on the last row of the board at the opponents side, it promotes. The owner of the Berolina pawn may decide to which piece the pawn promotes. In general, the choice is between queen, rook, knight, bishop, or any non-standard non-royal chess piece that is present in the array (but, of course, not a pawn or Berolina pawn.)
A computer would be amazing at this variant for all of the wrong reasons.
What's wrong
@@ckq That a computer would apply those superhuman reflexes to overwhelm the opponent regardless whether it had any strategic thinking.
I was thinking of making a custom position with this variant, like one that resembles the starting positions in a soccer game or something
I found you
@@Roach-community oh hi roach
ITS FOOTBALL
i recognize you
@@XolbEulb hah, controversy. quite common in the usa.
you missed mate in 1 earlier
Ye, I'm in misery haha
chess chess slide
What about some dancing pieces? 🕺
5:20 queen blunder and missed it
kind of it, cause if the opponent was fast enough he could've just "dodged"
My favorite version of ches
please do this on stream more
RTS CHESS
Wow this was very frustrating, watching all the blunders
A human could probably beat a really dumb bot opponent that just made every move as soon as it became available, but I think as soon as the bot had any real sense of strategy the game would be broken - humans just can't focus on all 32 pieces simultaneously at that pace.
0:30 u missed mate in 1
Great vid!
0:27 you blundered mate in one
missed mate in one, i think blundering mate in one sounds like letting your opponent checkmate you
The cooldowns mean the knight couldnt cover for the queen, but in regular chess youd be right
no. the queen was gonna take the knight and then the king would take the queen. that would just be losing 2 pieces
"...is there a way for me to not be white..." 4:28
If you first force your opponent's king to move, and then move your queen right next to your opponent's king before cooldown, is that checkmate?
In this variant it seems to be "take the king to win" and no rule that you win on the turn before if they can't escape.
I want to make a chess set to play this irl
0:26 blue forgot checkmate 🗿
I was gonna comment that
he could move the bishop then move the king
just take the queen then knight, knights on cooldown
@@TheOnly2ndwait for the knight cooldown to end.
YOU HAD MATE IN 1 AT 0:26
Its not mate you can dodge. Always needs 2 pieces to win.
why didnt you put the music lime
heylo
What if pawns moved diagonally and captured only vertically!?
The Piececlopedia: Berolina Pawn
Historic remarks
The Berolina Pawn has been introduced by E. Nebermann in 1926. The pawn is named after the city of Berlin. It is one of the most popular fairy chess pieces, because its movement rules are a logical twist of the rules for the pawn.
Movement rules
Berolina paws can only move forward. When a Berolina pawn makes a non-capturing move, it goes one square diagonally forwards. When a Berolina pawn is still on its original square on the second row, it can make a non-capturing move diagonally forwards of one or of two squares - if it moves two squares, the first square must be empty. A pawn captures one square vertically forwards.
When a Berolina pawn has moved two squares forwards, the opponent has the possibility to take it en passant: in the directly following turn a (Berolina) pawn of the opponent may take it also on the square that was passed by.
When a Berolina pawn reaches a promotion square, that is, a square on the last row of the board at the opponents side, it promotes. The owner of the Berolina pawn may decide to which piece the pawn promotes. In general, the choice is between queen, rook, knight, bishop, or any non-standard non-royal chess piece that is present in the array (but, of course, not a pawn or Berolina pawn.)
e
3 mins
FIRST!!!
who asked + l + ratio