How to play Hidden Identity Chess

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  • Опубликовано: 24 дек 2022
  • Learn the rules to the board game Hidden Identity Chess quickly and concisely - This video has no distractions, just the rules. For a refresher of the original rules of Chess, check out this video: • How to play Chess (202...
    Don't own the game? Buy it here:
    buy.triplesgames.com/HiddenId...
    (This product is designed by Triple S Games, We earn a small amount on each purchase)
    RULES:
    The rules are the same as regular chess except for these changes. There is no check or checkmate. The object of the game is to capture your opponent’s king. Each piece is replaced by a special chess piece whose identity can only be seen on 1 side. During set up, each player places their pieces however they want on their closest 2 rows, with their pieces identities facing them, hidden from their opponent. There is no restriction to where pieces can be placed. Pawns are allowed to be placed on the first row and bishops can be placed on the same color.
    Whenever a piece is captured, its identity is revealed.
    Pawns on the first row are allowed an initial double-step move if you want. If a pawn moves to its second row, it can still perform its double step move. En passant is allowed like normal against an opponent’s pawn taking a double-step from either row, however, if the opponent’s piece being captured isn’t a pawn then the pawn preforming the move is removed from the board instead. When performing en passant, announce what you are doing, but leave the identity of the piece you are trying to capture hidden. Your opponent then says if it is a pawn, if it isn't, then the pieces identity remains hidden. The king is allowed to move to a threatened space.
    Castling is allowed if the rook is on the same row as the king and there are no other pieces in between. To castle, move the king 2 spaces towards the rook, then move the rook to the other side of the king. If a rook is 2 spaces away, or adjacent to the king, then the king takes the space of the rook and the rook is moved to the other side. You may only castle if it is the King and Rook's first move of the game.
    If ever a piece is moved illegally, or discovered to have move illegally in the past, then the illegally moved piece is removed from the board and the opponent of that piece also removes any single enemy piece of their choice from the board as a penalty. If the illegally moved piece was already removed from the board when discovered, then the opponent removes 2 pieces of their choice instead of 1. If the removed piece was the king, then they win the game immediately. If a player performs more than 1 illegal move in a game, then they immediately lose.
    The first player to capture their opponent’s king, wins!
    You can also play with the revealed kings variant. At the start of the game, use a divider when setting up the pieces and play with a normal king. Remove the divider to begin play, both players will now play the game with knowledge of the enemy king’s location. If your opponent performs an illegal move, then instead of removing pieces, you win the game immediately.
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Комментарии • 945

  • @williamhrivnak7345
    @williamhrivnak7345 Год назад +3614

    I feel like castling is a terrible idea in this game because you automatically reveal the king and a rook by doing it.

    • @Acc_Expired
      @Acc_Expired Год назад +487

      More importantly, you can place your king and rook anywhere, so you can just place the king and rook as if you castled already.

    • @nibbletrinnal2289
      @nibbletrinnal2289 Год назад +259

      the castling might not be legal though; you could castle any two pieces so long as you arent caught, which appears to be part of the strategy in the game

    • @bored-bt4nn
      @bored-bt4nn Год назад +64

      Like you fake castle pawn with pawn and now opponent will focus to that pawn

    • @pedroivog.s.6870
      @pedroivog.s.6870 Год назад +17

      If they already discovered it basically has the defensive purpose anyway

    • @rubutu8408
      @rubutu8408 Год назад +7

      @@nibbletrinnal2289 but you van only castle king and rook no other

  • @darks_arts
    @darks_arts Год назад +5557

    Find it interesting that lying isn’t really allowed in this version. You would think there’d be a whole thing where you could just bluff about “yea this pawn is totally a queen” and that kinda stuff. Like BS but for chess

    • @digojez
      @digojez Год назад +428

      pokerface: chess edition

    • @avivyoukerharel2140
      @avivyoukerharel2140 Год назад +172

      Yeah i think it would be much more interesting

    • @hamizannaruto
      @hamizannaruto Год назад +492

      @@avivyoukerharel2140 This feels more like a memory chess, rather than identity hidden chess.
      I would immediately change the rules for bluffing. Of course, you can't lie if they get caught of making illegal move, but you can lie and bluff your way to victory.

    • @avivyoukerharel2140
      @avivyoukerharel2140 Год назад +78

      @@hamizannaruto yeah i understood that, but then why is there a whole rule about lying and punishments and stuff,they could just say that its illegal in this game.

    • @fos1451
      @fos1451 Год назад +105

      The reason why you can't lie on this version is because the pieces location are randomized at the start of the game by you
      It would be too op if you could just make a queen move like a knight for the first few moves (while the opponent has no way of knowing that it's actually a queen) and then you just changed it back to queen's move last second for checkmate
      Bluff would make sense if the starting position is original chess and your opponent just have to remember which piece is where

  • @Aerxis
    @Aerxis Год назад +3764

    The divider is not necessary. Just place the covered king, then both players reveal their kings by turning them or replacing them with a normal king.

    • @a_wild_Kirillian
      @a_wild_Kirillian Год назад +244

      I see you're absolutely capable of making a great addition. That's a really good point and it's strange that the video creators don't account for it

    • @thejar3724
      @thejar3724 Год назад +64

      The divider is necessary, when you can see exactly where the enemy king is, you could place the queen on the same file with a rook behind it to defend for an immediate checkmate.
      If you do this then the opponent would move the king when they see you do this, and then you might follow suit and the game would never begin

    • @Aerxis
      @Aerxis Год назад +447

      @@thejar3724 it is obvious you didn't read or understand my proposal. Please read again.

    • @a_wild_Kirillian
      @a_wild_Kirillian Год назад +107

      @@thejar3724, Aerxis is talking about placing kings from the special covered pieces set at first and then, when the placement is finished, opening, uncovering them. That way you can't initially place your pieces based on the position of the opponent's king

    • @thejar3724
      @thejar3724 Год назад +96

      @@Aerxis sorry I misread you’re right 😂

  • @GermaphobeMusic
    @GermaphobeMusic Год назад +1937

    The one time where playing chess in front of a mirror actually gives you an upper hand

    • @byeguyssry
      @byeguyssry Год назад +146

      Technically, playing normal chess in front of a mirror helps you see from the opponent's POV, which is actually helpful in avoiding blunders

    • @TheOofster123
      @TheOofster123 Год назад +20

      That would give your enemy an upper hand.

    • @dogbone3733
      @dogbone3733 Год назад +3

      Manstercot

    • @TemphinFD
      @TemphinFD Год назад +34

      @@byeguyssry i feel like this only applies at lower levels before the visualization becomes strong.

    • @byeguyssry
      @byeguyssry Год назад +18

      @@TemphinFD iirc there was some chess gm that famously blundered a mate in 1, because while the move seemed good to him, he didn't realize opponent had a simple idea to mate.
      Basically even GMs forget to visualizer from opponent POV at times.

  • @YoungBarszcz
    @YoungBarszcz Год назад +197

    I love the fact that chess developers left such a big modding potential, so when players get bored even after 1500 years of playing the game thay can still ad a fresh touch to it

    • @banned2911
      @banned2911 9 месяцев назад +8

      Fr chess mods are cool

  • @cardboardtoaster2169
    @cardboardtoaster2169 Год назад +901

    Having the pieces in any starting position actually could mean there is a meta in this game

    • @Deo_xx
      @Deo_xx Год назад +11

      frfr

    • @Emperorhirohito19272
      @Emperorhirohito19272 Год назад +80

      There’s a meta in chess

    • @alex2005z
      @alex2005z Год назад +5

      Sure, but then why not run a strategy to counter the meta?

    • @Idk_a_name_88
      @Idk_a_name_88 Год назад +36

      @@alex2005z it doesnt have a counter strategy thats why its meta

    • @alex2005z
      @alex2005z Год назад

      @@Idk_a_name_88 it doesnt mean that it doesnt have counters. It just means its the best overall strategy

  • @TheRabbitPoet
    @TheRabbitPoet Год назад +832

    I once played a game called medieval that was very similar to this except you were allowed to place your pieces anywhere on your side of the board, they all moved like kings, when two pieces clashed you would have to say the attacking piece's rank and the highest ranking one will eat the other. The highest ranking pieces was the mine, which couldn't move and could only be killed by the lowest raking piece.
    The goal of the game was to find the opponent king and kill it before they could do the same to yours

    • @ninjadragongamer6861
      @ninjadragongamer6861 Год назад +180

      That reminds me of the game Stratego, very similar

    • @Zhrmald
      @Zhrmald Год назад +43

      Game of the generals?

    • @S5R_0005
      @S5R_0005 Год назад +9

      i used to have a transformers version of that

    • @midnight_blue_moon
      @midnight_blue_moon Год назад +13

      I once played something similar in a class, except we were the pieces

    • @that_one_guy934
      @that_one_guy934 Год назад +12

      @@midnight_blue_moon Yeah and you would run around, but if the spy (lowest) caught the general (highest) you lose.

  • @makiOSC
    @makiOSC Год назад +20

    i actually love how normally illegal moves are actually allowed to be played, you just have a high risk in doing so.

  • @salt7390
    @salt7390 Год назад +237

    Hidden Identity Chess is kinda similar to another board game called "Game of the Generals", the different concept is that they never move in diagonals and only move in one box or step each move for each pieces. Pieces are eliminated by ranks. And the pieces will only be revealed when the game ended.

    • @MGmirkin
      @MGmirkin Год назад +34

      AKA, "Stratego."

    • @niceColdWuhta
      @niceColdWuhta Год назад +19

      @@MGmirkin both games are quite similar in strategy and gameplay, yet the are differences
      1. Stratego has miners and bombs. GOTG doesn’t
      2. The spy in both games do the complete opposite. In GOTG, it takes out everyone but the Private (which can only kill Spy) In Stratego, Marshal can kill all but the Spy (which kills Marshal)
      3. The flag can move in GOTG; Stratego’s flag is just permanently there
      Lastly, (I could be wrong but) there is no evidence that GOTG ripped off Stratego (Stratego came first);, it is said the spies were added in GOTG after rewatching James Bond movies
      Just my take on it :)

    • @AlecSoD
      @AlecSoD Год назад

      @@niceColdWuhtaThe Marshal can kill the Spy in Stratego, but ONLY if the Marshal is the attacker.

  • @jardex2275
    @jardex2275 Год назад +94

    So it's Stratego: Chess Edition. I like the idea of players trying to get away with cheating. It really comes down to a game of memory.

    • @umathewu
      @umathewu Год назад +2

      I love Stratego!

    • @Ravenleaf182
      @Ravenleaf182 Год назад

      @@umathewu I prefer stratego :P

  • @tomd96
    @tomd96 Год назад +463

    I was thinking that originally you could just win in one turn by putting the queen and rook on the same file but then if the king can be anywhere that doesn't really work. In the other variation where you can see the king, you already know to prepare for it.
    Enforcing fair play while being totally random seems like an interesting concept.

    • @a_wild_Kirillian
      @a_wild_Kirillian Год назад +36

      I think you've missed the part where they say that in the open kings variation you must use a divider screen to obscure king's placement which makes it impossible to prepare the immediate attack everytime.
      This variant won't be fair, however, because the available total control over piece placement leads to some positions having a stronger sacrificial attack for one of the players (you would really struggle to defend having a king in the corner with all of the opponents pieces pointed there basically from the start).
      The base variant mitigates this more by not having information about the king's placement so you wouldn't know right away to press the available attack. But not completely. Those positions will most probably be imbalanced anyway.
      Either way, the lack of information leads to a much more defensive game style because even if the attack is very beneficial to one player statistically the inability to calculate the outcome of the possible sacrifices reliably makes it a polarizing choice. The risk making it possible both to win and to lose quickly even if the latter is more probable

    • @Aerxis
      @Aerxis Год назад +5

      @@a_wild_Kirillian I think you missed the part where that's his problem....

    • @a_wild_Kirillian
      @a_wild_Kirillian Год назад +8

      @@Aerxis, um, who asked? The person was discussing the balancing of the variant so I've supported their discussion. What do you add here with your "problem" talk except for toxicity?

    • @Aerxis
      @Aerxis Год назад +4

      @@a_wild_Kirillian I add a reference to "the human spider", a joke you missed.

    • @a_wild_Kirillian
      @a_wild_Kirillian Год назад +7

      @@Aerxis, well, it was a terrible attempt at humor and communication then. Because you've failed to account for other people not knowing the more obscure meaning of the phrase that can and most probably will be understood quite directly as a common passive aggressive remark.

  • @wallridez514
    @wallridez514 Год назад +203

    Theres a lot of cool variations you can play with those pieces. A stratego version comes to mind, where you reveal the pieces before they move, then hide them again...

    • @paulamarina04
      @paulamarina04 Год назад +17

      what about:
      - this same setup with the same pieces
      - youre allowed to make any move you want on your turn, legal or illegal
      - if a player believes the move their opponent just made was illegal, they may object to it. if the objection was correct, the one who performed the illegal move must undo the move, losing a turn. *however,* if the objection was incorrect and the move was legal, then the player who objected loses a turn, and their opponent moves again
      - you may only object to your opponents move immediately after it has been performed, and before you have made your next move
      - if you object to your opponents move, the two of you are allowed to discuss and give as many arguments as you wish about whether or not the move was illegal. you can reveal as much information about your pieces and knowledge as you want, but you must NEVER lie to your opponent. this goes on until the debate is settled
      promotion rules:
      - you can choose not to promote a pawn that gets to the other side of the board, but its an illegal move.
      - you can promote non-pawn pieces to any other piece (except king), including pawns, but this is also an illegal move.
      - you can choose to promote a pawn in the opposite side of the board even if it wasnt moved that turn. this is *not* an illegal move
      misc rules:
      - you are never required to show your opponent any of your pieces at any time during the game
      - there is no checkmate or stalemate. however, there *is* check, and any move that doesnt account for it is illegal, even if the one who moved didnt know they were in check
      - objecting to your oponents moves is never required
      - there is no limit to how often or how many times you can object to your opponents moves
      - kings and rooks lose their ability to castle legally as soon as they make any move, legal or illegal, even if its undone after an objection
      - if you promote or capture by en passant, you must announce it

    • @paulamarina04
      @paulamarina04 Год назад +6

      istg every time i come up with a fun little idea for something like this i end up spending 2 hours refining it and writing a multiple paragraph essay about it in the yt comment section why am i like this
      anyway i hoped you liked it lmao
      name suggestions are welcome

    • @versuzzero5335
      @versuzzero5335 Год назад +6

      @@paulamarina04
      Feels like there should be a third party to make sure the players don't lie too much.
      Just like "Game of the Generals" board game...

    • @paulamarina04
      @paulamarina04 Год назад +3

      @@versuzzero5335 yeah, its the only fair way to ensure no one is cheating. however it should be noted that the third party observer should not add anything to the discussion, only ensure that everything being said is true. if the players omit/overlook important information, they cant say anything about it. lastly, theyre not a judge, so its not a matter of convincing them that the move was legal/illegal, its a matter of convincing your opponent

    • @versuzzero5335
      @versuzzero5335 Год назад +1

      @@paulamarina04
      Yes. That's exactly what I'm thinking.

  • @jcrams9939
    @jcrams9939 Год назад +79

    It's like the combination of Games of Generals, a Filipino board game, and Chess in a single board game. Awesome!

    • @airstep001
      @airstep001 Год назад +1

      Wait what Filipino board game please tell me the only Filipino board game I know is the one with the rocks and like 16 holes

    • @jcrams9939
      @jcrams9939 Год назад +3

      @@airstep001 The Games of Generals, it was invented by a Filipino. Also known as "Salpakan". You can find it in supermarkets. It has the same concept of hidden pieces however slightly different to the rules of chess

    • @Jestersage
      @Jestersage Год назад

      My understanding is that it's equivalent to Stratego

    • @dnago916
      @dnago916 Год назад

      salpakan my beloved

  • @chunnin33
    @chunnin33 Год назад +40

    The revealed kings version could be great fun, probably the second best variant I've heard of after Chess+

  • @Scorialimit
    @Scorialimit Год назад +28

    "In a game of chess, you can never let your adversary see your pieces"

  • @329link
    @329link Год назад +9

    Definitely some fun to be had here. I can already see players moving single spaces all over, saving diagonal movement or any long stretches for bigger plays or attempted trickery. Imagine managing to make a bishop look like it's a king! This would completely change the mind games that go on in a chess match.

  • @cheesetonk
    @cheesetonk Год назад +35

    games of the generals but more chesssy

  • @alex_zetsu
    @alex_zetsu Год назад +16

    The funny thing is that you could use the default starting positions and it shouldn't change things, but I bet it would since someone is going to mix up that bishop and pawn that last moved 30 moves ago.

  • @NiqIce
    @NiqIce Год назад +3

    The possibilities of strategies that can be made in this one is crazy. Really cool stuff

  • @koibubbles3302
    @koibubbles3302 Год назад +24

    So my thought is to always move kings like pawns, always move rooks one or two spaces forward unless you absolutely can’t, play bishops as though they are queens, play one or two pawns as though they are the king, and well horses are horses

    • @MGmirkin
      @MGmirkin Год назад +5

      Or play Queens like they're only Bishops [or only Rooks]. Until you need to use them otherwise, strategically. :P

    • @SgtSupaman
      @SgtSupaman Год назад +1

      Yeah, it seems like the most obfuscating way to play the early game is like you have 2 knights, 3 bishops, and 11 pawns (or 2 bishops and 12 pawns if you're more concerned about keeping your queen in the larger mix).

  • @BobChess
    @BobChess Год назад +3

    I love this variation so much!

  • @HittingBandy
    @HittingBandy Год назад +3

    This reminds me of the board game 'Game of Generals' where each piece can only move in the 4 adjacent squares, but the way they capture a piece is dictated by a ranking system.

  • @quickballplays1867
    @quickballplays1867 Год назад

    Keep up the good work, and merry Christmas

  • @wbl_unlimited
    @wbl_unlimited Год назад +39

    So chess, but Stratego

  • @aciliayran
    @aciliayran Год назад +5

    I love your videos!

  • @Iceavius_
    @Iceavius_ Год назад +10

    This is Generals, this is literally just Generals

  • @emmanuelisaacdmagcawas6708
    @emmanuelisaacdmagcawas6708 Год назад +3

    What a great way to make it more mind boggling

  • @WackoMcGoose
    @WackoMcGoose Год назад +5

    I could see some interesting bluff potential here. Pick a bishop, rook, or queen to only ever move in single-step increments and play defensively with that piece, and try to trick the opponent into going after it, thinking it's your king.

  • @h.p.sabjion4247
    @h.p.sabjion4247 Год назад +11

    I really like the idea, you can just bluff all the way though if you want and i think two GM's would have an absolute field day trying to be a poker player for once

    • @SgtSupaman
      @SgtSupaman Год назад +2

      If you're playing anyone intelligent, bluffing all the way through would either be impossible or not worth the added difficulty on your part. Bluffing in the early game is an absolutely great strategy, but, at some point, your rook that's been inching forward like a pawn should strike when it has an advantage.

  • @lifinale
    @lifinale Год назад +5

    Inspired off this game, here is my own chess variant.
    Plays exactly like this (hidden identity, place anywhere you want) but with an added twist. After a turn, the opposing player can accuse your move as an illegal move. If it is, the piece of pawn is removed and a piece or pawn of the opponents choice is removed. If it’s not, YOU lose a piece or pawn of their choice. Same can happen with you. You can do whatever you want with the pieces but any move other than their intended move is risk of being caught and losing material. En passant is allowed and can be done on ANY piece or pawn but en passant can only be performed by a pawn. If a player suspects that en passant was not done by a pawn, they can accuse their opponent. Same rules apply, but if they win, they also get their taken piece back. If by chance you take the other person’s king during the aftermath of an illegal move, you do not take it, but instead it is now revealed for the rest of the game. However, if your KING gets caught doing an illegal move, you lose immediately.

    • @gg-96
      @gg-96 Год назад

      you can just take the king and win before challenging

    • @pupip55
      @pupip55 Год назад

      Like the card game cheat?

  • @GUNS_jk
    @GUNS_jk Год назад +1

    I really like this variant of Chess. I will pick it up for sure.

  • @xeskeyjetski
    @xeskeyjetski Год назад +2

    This is like Stratego! And I love it!

  • @thriquinox
    @thriquinox Год назад +13

    game of the generals but in chess:

  • @WaterDroplet02
    @WaterDroplet02 Год назад +11

    ooh, this variant reminds me a lot of Game of the Generals. can you guys do a video on that one too?

    • @MGmirkin
      @MGmirkin Год назад +1

      AKA, "Stratego" in the USA...

  • @schmarron9914
    @schmarron9914 Год назад +2

    I think it's cool that bluffing what your pieces are is a viable strategy in this game. You just have to make sure that the enemy player knows about this/also plays like this

  • @cwp24
    @cwp24 Год назад +8

    Out of all the variants out there, this one seems to be the most practical one out there. I’d be willing to play this if there was a way to play it online.

  • @kiantsukagami8230
    @kiantsukagami8230 Год назад +4

    This game actually reminded me of game of the generals

  • @ShadowCatGaming26
    @ShadowCatGaming26 Год назад +9

    Every piece: moves like a pawn
    Enemy: You sure you’re not only using pawn right?
    Me: Yes🙂

    • @SgtSupaman
      @SgtSupaman Год назад +2

      If all sixteen of your pieces move one space forward, like a pawn, then you already lost. They will know you made four illegal moves with your knights and bishops.

    • @ShadowCatGaming26
      @ShadowCatGaming26 Год назад +3

      @@SgtSupaman just do it for all (except bishops and knights) pieces

    • @Sisyphos1312
      @Sisyphos1312 Год назад

      @@SgtSupaman they wont know which pieces to accuse of cheating tho

    • @SgtSupaman
      @SgtSupaman Год назад +2

      @@Sisyphos1312 , you don't have to accuse a piece of cheating, just a person. If the player makes more than one illegal move, they lose, regardless of which pieces.

    • @Sisyphos1312
      @Sisyphos1312 Год назад +1

      @SgtSupaman oh yeah guess I didnt quite listen to that

  • @Frxntize
    @Frxntize Год назад

    this sounds fun and i want to try it.

  • @princesslinkin7587
    @princesslinkin7587 Год назад

    cool mix of stratego and chess

  • @caddyshack4977
    @caddyshack4977 Год назад +4

    This is just Stratego with chess pieces, Neat!

  • @tango_mondo5751
    @tango_mondo5751 Год назад +27

    This is fog chess but the fog tiles cover your enemy pieces

    • @vioslavia
      @vioslavia Год назад

      ... There's fog chess?

    • @widmo206
      @widmo206 Год назад +10

      @@vioslavia Fog of war chess, to be precise. You can only see the squares that your pieces (and pawns) can see/move to.

    • @vioslavia
      @vioslavia Год назад

      @@widmo206 oh... Gonna have to check that out. Might I invite you to check out Tyranny The Chess Card Game?

    • @tango_mondo5751
      @tango_mondo5751 Год назад +1

      Thank god i commented on time

    • @vioslavia
      @vioslavia Год назад

      @@tango_mondo5751 thank you. I had forgotten about that

  • @TheLumin_a-T
    @TheLumin_a-T Год назад

    this looks so fun

  • @kremenskiyjr
    @kremenskiyjr Год назад +2

    you can play it online by allowing starting pos self-assembly and making opponent's pieces have a 1x1 texture

  • @Nepycros
    @Nepycros Год назад +7

    What's fascinating is that the rule where an "already performed an illegal move" piece causes 2 pieces to be removed is fascinating. It's a gambit, can you wager 2 pieces to perform a super illegal move early on if it gives you enough advantage? You lose if you have been caught performing two illegal moves, but that means in every game, one illegal move is technically allowed so long as you're sneaky enough.

    • @alexholker1309
      @alexholker1309 Год назад

      I was thinking that as well. In terms of materiel, it would be very hard for your opponent to make cheating to capture their queen with your pawn more costly to you than to them.

    • @nibbletrinnal2289
      @nibbletrinnal2289 Год назад +3

      i think one of the most fascinating parts is that, as others in the comments pointed out, its impossible to truly know if you cheated if you make it ambiguous as to which pieces are which. one guy suggested moving all pieces as pawns, making it impossible to know which pieces are actually pawns, which means the opponent knows you're cheating, but can't point out a specific case to call out
      although, on the other hand, there's a 50% chance in this case for the opponent to just call a random piece as cheating with no repurcussions if they're wrong; perhaps there should be repurcussions for false accusations

    • @SgtSupaman
      @SgtSupaman Год назад +1

      @@nibbletrinnal2289 , doesn't matter if you know which piece made the illegal move. If you know two illegal moves were made (like all sixteen pieces stepping once forward meaning that four illegal moves were made by the knights and bishops), the opponent automatically loses. The spirit of the game is that no one should have to call cheating ever, because you should only be making legal moves. So, no, there shouldn't be any repercussions for accusing someone of cheating. Cheating is meant to be easy to weed out.

    • @Sisyphos1312
      @Sisyphos1312 Год назад

      @@nibbletrinnal2289 i like the idea of this, a complete madhatter strategy, a full on gamble with high payoff. love it.

    • @Buglin_Burger7878
      @Buglin_Burger7878 Год назад

      @@nibbletrinnal2289 They don't need to point a specific instance at a certain point. Bishops moving 1 ahead, Rooks at angles, Knights doing both. Only Pawns, and the King and Queen can do this.

  • @Modie
    @Modie Год назад +6

    I feel, the rule about lying is really weird, because it requires that after you lied you admit to being found out. Which I feel is weird. I guess in official tournaments, this would work with someone checking the replay (maybe it could also work on PC), but in a general match it would just result in arguing if that piece really moved differently 10 turns back.
    But even then, what I feel would be necessary is some kind of way to mark your opponents pieces so you know what they can technically be. Of course, you can make mistakes there, but otherwise it would be really hard for even good players to remember the exact move order 10-20 turns later. I guess, you could say that this is the difference to the top players in the end, but if that is the case then the whole lying thing becomes even less of a real part of the game, because then you wouldn't risk lying if you know the opponent is able to remember this. Or the whole beginning of the game would just be a combination of random moves to make sure that the opponent can never keep track of you lying. But if you don't make progress, what's the point of lying?

    • @giantnoah
      @giantnoah Год назад +1

      Agreed, feels like this would be better played on a computer or with a referee that can enforce a no-lying rule.

    • @SgtSupaman
      @SgtSupaman Год назад +4

      "what's the point of lying?" You aren't supposed to lie in the first place. The pieces are only supposed to make legal moves. Players that take advantage of having their pieces hidden to make illegal moves automatically lose the game.

    • @Modie
      @Modie Год назад

      @@SgtSupaman
      But then you would lose the game immediately. The fact that you don't lose immediately and that the opponent needs to call you out for it is showing Tha lying is supposed to be a strategy.

    • @SgtSupaman
      @SgtSupaman Год назад +4

      @@Modie , your opponent has to call you out if you switch your cards in poker too, but that doesn't mean it is part of the strategy within the rules of the game. It is cheating, period. You are talking about a meta strategy by trying to loophole the rules to see what you can get away with. There is a difference.

    • @Modie
      @Modie Год назад

      @@SgtSupaman
      That's a bad example. You can immediately call someone out for switching cards by just catching them in the act. This is impossible here because you aren't able to tell if a move is wrong or not. For example: I move my knight like a rook the first time and then 7 moves later I move it like a knight. You can't call me out on the first one because you can't know yet that I made an illegal move and you can't call me out on the other one because that one is legal. So you have to call me out on the fact that this piece moved differently 7 moves before. And good luck doing that. It's literally impossible. It's like trying to say someone switched cards in poker after you lost. Then, no one will believe you anymore because it's too late to prove.

  • @louiseugeniojr.3530
    @louiseugeniojr.3530 Год назад

    That was an interesting tutorial.

  • @hypercactus6489
    @hypercactus6489 Год назад

    I’m glad the set up is different. I was thinking “man this would be essentally pointless for grandmasters seeing most of them memorize the board anyway.”

  • @bradensorensen966
    @bradensorensen966 Год назад +6

    I feel like it would be very difficult to follow piece movement to ensure no illegal moves are ever made.

    • @kkrup5395
      @kkrup5395 Год назад

      You missed the rule about no checks and mates. There are no illegal moves. Unless you talk about cheating by moving pawns as queens for example, in that case that just part of the game

    • @xanderlastname3281
      @xanderlastname3281 Год назад

      ​@@kkrup5395 I mean if you're caught twice it's an instant loss, so it's not really supposed to be part of the game
      Atleast that's how I understand it i could be wrong idk

  • @anhdunghisinh
    @anhdunghisinh Год назад +5

    Isn't this makes castling useless? since it could expose your king position?

  • @dudemusicofficial
    @dudemusicofficial Год назад

    This is freaking cool

  • @CyanZone69
    @CyanZone69 Год назад +1

    BRO I NEED THIS

  • @mmmyummeh1493
    @mmmyummeh1493 Год назад +3

    This seems a lot like game of the generals

  • @versuzzero5335
    @versuzzero5335 Год назад +12

    2:23
    "If a player performs more than one illegal move in a game"
    You can't really know when the opponent moved illegally unless you discovered them.
    So I think, "If a player discovered the opponent performs more than one illegal move in a game." But what if both of them did more than one illegal move and noone "discovered" it.
    This needs a third party as an observer, like in the "Game of the Generals".
    The current rules are too "trusting" that both players would only do one illegal move per game.
    When we did this, we had an observer, since it's a combination of "Chess" and "Generals"

    • @versuzzero5335
      @versuzzero5335 Год назад

      I think Triple S Games haven't done "Games of the Generals" how to play yet...

    • @knightofcarrion7358
      @knightofcarrion7358 Год назад +1

      Or just allow cheating like most of the comments seem to want. Adds more fun to the game when you are trying to guess the players illegal moves.

    • @williamhrivnak7345
      @williamhrivnak7345 Год назад +2

      Is it really that hard for two friends to just play this with an honor system? What’s the point of cheating and ruining the experience of a fun quirky board game with nothing on the line?

    • @versuzzero5335
      @versuzzero5335 Год назад

      @@williamhrivnak7345
      It's more fun to be crafty and have deceit as one of the main focus of these kind of games.
      I mean...
      It's main attraction is "hidden identity". So having a third party as observer is the best to stabilise the game.

    • @MGmirkin
      @MGmirkin Год назад +3

      Illegal moves should be disallowed, period. IE, players must be required to move their pieces appropriately to their type. If they intentionally don't, they should lose the match.
      Obviously, there's no real way to police this (aside from a 3rd party observer/mediator), so it would have to be 100% "honor system." But still...

  • @MrHocotateFreight
    @MrHocotateFreight Год назад +1

    I used to Have this exact game, but it was battlefield themed, not the videogame, just a stereotype medieval battlefield. Pieces were numbers with a little art piece on cardboard, slid into a fortress wall style holder to keep the numbers visible only to you
    Less movement if I remember correctly, I did wish we had more movement styles akin to chess, so I'd say this is the upgrade!

    • @MGmirkin
      @MGmirkin Год назад +1

      That sounds like "Stratego," which I was very good at, as a kid.

  • @agr0nianTV
    @agr0nianTV Год назад +2

    Basically Chess combined with Stratego one of my other favorite games 💞

  • @gingeral253
    @gingeral253 Год назад +5

    I need to see a sample game. It seems too hard to bluff if taking a piece reveals it and gives a really harsh penalty. But on the other hand, not being able to directly challenge a bluff makes it weird, since you need to catch an inconsistency.

    • @SgtSupaman
      @SgtSupaman Год назад +2

      The point is just to make both players figure out and remember the other's pieces, not to cheat. You are supposed to play the pieces just like normal chess. That's why cheating twice results in an instant loss. You can legally bluff by moving a queen like a pawn until you want to surprise your opponent, but moving a pawn like a queen for a couple turns means you are cheating and lose the game.

    • @gingeral253
      @gingeral253 Год назад

      @@SgtSupaman That’s an issue, since if they catch the inconsistency, the Queen is effectively a pawn that loses you a piece when taken.

    • @SgtSupaman
      @SgtSupaman Год назад +2

      @@gingeral253 , no, the queen can move like a pawn using legal queen moves, so it won't count as cheating even if it gets taken. That is why I said it is a legal bluff to use a queen like a pawn (as long as you don't try to en passant with it, as that would be an illegal move for a queen).

    • @gingeral253
      @gingeral253 Год назад

      @@SgtSupaman Oh I understand. But that means the only pieces that benefit from this are the Queen and Bishop. Or maybe the rook. It would be a lot easier if I seen an example.

    • @SgtSupaman
      @SgtSupaman Год назад +2

      @@gingeral253 , the benefit is that the pieces stay hidden the entire game. Players will easily identify knights by their unique moves, but, when you are considering your next move, you have to remember where those knights were (as well as every other piece that you've identified thus far). Queens, rooks, and kings can all do the basic one-step move of a pawn. When queens, rooks, and bishops only take single steps in whichever direction, they can look like kings. There are plenty of legal bluffs that can be done in the early game to keep your pieces identity hidden until you get a good opening to strike.

  • @iamnoob8835
    @iamnoob8835 Год назад +3

    Its interesting that you can legally make more than 1 illegal move if your opponent just has a really, really, bad memory

    • @cononsberg6919
      @cononsberg6919 Год назад

      Technically, in regular chess, you can still do this, but your opponent's memory has to be so bad they forget how to play chess

  • @skllsession3993
    @skllsession3993 Год назад +1

    Sounds like a weird mix of Stratego and chess, my favorites!

  • @DannyBPlays
    @DannyBPlays Год назад

    so basically just checkers except you kill pieces and move in different ways. The idea of "check" and "checkmate" are so unique to chess that removing those ideas makes it just "move your pieces in unique ways and kill as many of the other as you can

  • @gameworldjt
    @gameworldjt Год назад +8

    Seems unbalanced simply because you can place your pieces however you want to
    Not being able to see piece's identities isn't a big problem, since by seeing them move you can narrow what piece it is down a lot, and then you just have to memorize it, but people have been playing chess blind, and from experience I can say that it isn't too hard, so while it is a unique idea, the important part is the set up being up to the player

    • @IndaBlood
      @IndaBlood Год назад +3

      That just part of the fun, you could engage in some trickery, like pretending the queen is a pawn and striking a piece you suspect to be the king.

    • @gameworldjt
      @gameworldjt Год назад

      @@IndaBlood yeah but there's only so much you can do with that

  • @lilyvaldis
    @lilyvaldis Год назад +2

    you should cover games of the general, it's similar

  • @jeromejomon9311
    @jeromejomon9311 Год назад +1

    I love this version of chess.

  • @slgalaxy
    @slgalaxy Год назад

    First time i hear you raise the voice in the intro. Also nice video!

  • @TheUntamedNetwork
    @TheUntamedNetwork Год назад +1

    Its hard to encorperate cheating as a core mechanic at any low level of chess. Best way I see fit is that players should be HEAVILY encouraged to notate moves, each piece back should be given a unique identifier (swappable) so both players can keep a method of verification.
    If accused of illegal movement, the piece(s) in question is revealed, if the accusation is correct the accuser can kill any piece on the board (except a known starter king), and if it is not chosen the piece remains revealed.
    If the accusation is false, the accused can select 1 of the opponents pieces to be revealed, then 1 piece to be removed.
    As I see it, with this set of rules almost all lies will likely get caught out by the end of the game, so it isn't strongly encouraged, but since the punishment for getting caught is not too great, you can likely get more out of it by taking some risks and getting a free grab or 2 before they call you on it.

  • @derpigun1316
    @derpigun1316 Год назад +1

    Looks similar to a boardgame I've had since I was a kid. I don't know what would be the English translation, but it works on the same system that you don't see the type of the enemy piece, you only see their back like in this video.
    There's a total of 40 pieces on the board, divided into cca 11 piece types/classes or whatever you want to call it. The main goal is similar to chess/this variant of chess where you have to find and capture the enemy's flag (which cannot be moved).
    The last thing worth mentioning is the "combat" system. Unlike in chess, most of the pieces aren't capable of taking out all of the enemy piece types. Essentially the pieces are rated in order of their strength (which is drawn on the board, left to right, from strongest to weakest) and while attacking, the attacker turns around the piece of the defender. If the defending piece is weaker than the attacking one, it is taken out of battle, if it's stronger, the attacking piece is removed instead and the defending piece is turned around once again. If both pieces are the same type they take each other out at the same time.

    • @ENCHANTMEN_
      @ENCHANTMEN_ Год назад +3

      Sounds like Stratego?

    • @british_boi6191
      @british_boi6191 Год назад +1

      is it stratego

    • @MGmirkin
      @MGmirkin Год назад +1

      Stratego. Played it all the time as a kid,and kicked @$$ most of the time.

    • @derpigun1316
      @derpigun1316 Год назад

      Just looked up the suggestions that the people told me in the replies. Yup, it's "Stratego". Ty everyone.

  • @starship1701
    @starship1701 Год назад +1

    I have two things I don't like about this. First is that castling should work the same as it does in 960 fischer random chess. In that variant, castling always moves the king and rook to the same squares. I believe this just works better. The next is that because of illegal moves, this would be better implemented on a website rather than in board game form. All of the rules about illegal moves are too complicated and only exist to make the game work, rather than to make it better. Players would have a tough time remembering whether an illegal move was made 20 or 30 moves ago.

  • @rieandrique
    @rieandrique Год назад +2

    this suddenly makes me want to play the game of the generals

  • @Lightmagician60
    @Lightmagician60 Год назад

    Coup, but chess
    if you think someone has made an illegal move, delare so, and they reveal the piece
    if your right, that piece's move is undone, and is removed, this counts as their turn.
    if your wrong, the move is done, and the player gets to move again.

  • @MADGary
    @MADGary Год назад

    I usually don't like chess, but this is pretty good.

  • @BernardManansala
    @BernardManansala Год назад

    Interesting
    I wonder if a "Liars" Chess variant is possible.
    Set-up is the same but after a piece is moved the opponent is given the option to declare if it was an illegal move. If the opponent calls the move illegal and it was, that piece is revealed and taken off the board. If the opponent calls the move illegal but it was not, that player who moved gets an extra turn. Also the King has to be revealed at the start of the game.
    I hope that made sense 🤷‍♂

  • @K1TTENS4LIFE
    @K1TTENS4LIFE Год назад

    THIS SOUND SO FUN

  • @TIKUL6
    @TIKUL6 Год назад

    Pretty great idea of a game, similar to Games of the Generals board game with their unidentified pieces.

    • @Jestersage
      @Jestersage Год назад

      And Stratego.
      What's interesting is that the Stratego-type games (includign chinese Army Chess) were kept alive, but pretty much forgotten here.

  • @practiceanything6073
    @practiceanything6073 Год назад

    this made me remember a game called games of the general

  • @WhyMebecause
    @WhyMebecause Год назад

    Awesome

  • @davidooow6678
    @davidooow6678 Год назад

    This is very similar to the game Stratego, really fun board game

  • @GraySlothPlaysGames
    @GraySlothPlaysGames Год назад

    I really love that an illegal move becomes a valid risk reward tactic.

  • @demonmysterykid3343
    @demonmysterykid3343 Год назад

    So cool

  • @SuperRedstoneman
    @SuperRedstoneman Год назад

    I feel like the only additionnal mindgames this might create is confusion about pawns/rooks or move everything you can one square at a time to confuse about the identity of the king which means the second variant doesn't look too good to me.

  • @diamondogaming5459
    @diamondogaming5459 Год назад

    Reminds of me of the game of the generals

  • @Eliza-hb1nc
    @Eliza-hb1nc Год назад

    this reminds me of that one level in chesscraft where black's back row is made of ghosts

  • @jamesemmanuelgubangco3560
    @jamesemmanuelgubangco3560 Год назад

    Same as "Game of Generals" in the Philippines but there is a slight difference.
    Hey can you please do a review for "Game of Generals"? I appreciate it man

  • @jacob_
    @jacob_ Год назад

    Nice

  • @CWonder_
    @CWonder_ Год назад

    Reminds me a lot of game of the generals.

  • @dragoness777
    @dragoness777 Год назад

    I read the title as "Hidden Identity Crisis" and I was like "that's so me"

  • @megachristianx6592
    @megachristianx6592 Год назад

    Was just thinking of a similar way of playing chess a few days ago

  • @KikomochiMendoza
    @KikomochiMendoza Год назад

    This game already exists. Its a Filipino board game called Generals
    edit: althouggh the moveset arent at all like chess and its less detecting whether your opponent made an illegal move and more like battleships meets chess meets risk. Every piece has a rank where higher rank can capture only capture a lower rank. The objective of he game is to capture the flag (sort of the king) or succesfully bring your flag to the opponent's side of the board.

  • @VO1D22-ch5bm
    @VO1D22-ch5bm 4 месяца назад

    This is a chess variant inspired by "Game of the Generals". The board game features mechanics from this particular game.

  • @chriswalker810
    @chriswalker810 Год назад

    Trying to take the elements of Stratego and putting them into chess looks good on paper but in practice doesn't work too well. Of course castling would be extremely bad and the knights are going to be the first known piece due to the only piece with a unique move of L. I think that if you pay enough attention to the moves. You will be able to deduce which piece is which.

  • @Vexnatos
    @Vexnatos Год назад

    to play Cemer, set up like normal, use normal pawns, but hidden identity pieces

  • @redhills7772
    @redhills7772 Год назад

    Could you make a video about how to play darts?

  • @Cryscorde
    @Cryscorde Год назад

    I feel like giving a second chance for illegal moves can make it more interesting. You can do an illegal move to throw your opponent off temporarily, or to capture a problematic piece (assuming their piece won’t be returned if, for example, you move a pawn like a knight to capture something).

    • @AAhmou
      @AAhmou Год назад

      However, if the opponent guesses where the king is, game over.

  • @youuuuuuuuuuutube
    @youuuuuuuuuuutube Год назад

    Castle with a rook and a pawn, and always move that pawn like a king => pretty sure a lot of people would think the pawn is the king :D
    Only if that pawn is captured, it will be revealed that this was actually a pawn. I'd say this strategy is pretty effective.

  • @MrCatface
    @MrCatface Год назад

    We really be out here making Chess into Stratego.
    I'm down for it.

  • @salmuttotabreabittlecochicarac
    @salmuttotabreabittlecochicarac 4 месяца назад

    also, instead of using a divider for that second version, you could just place it, but then remove the kings and replace them in the same place

  • @CruzMonrreal
    @CruzMonrreal Год назад

    Feels like stratego meets cheese. Neat

  • @TheRealDucky2
    @TheRealDucky2 Год назад

    This is cool and all but how would we get those pieces?

  • @spike333s3
    @spike333s3 4 месяца назад

    Add a host is also a good idea to keep identity hidden and prevent illegal move.

  • @tannerarmstrong1496
    @tannerarmstrong1496 Год назад

    When you specify a punishment for breaking the rules, rule breaking becomes a cost benefit analysis. I could see a situation where "illegally" castling with two pieces that don't include the king is worth the risk of discovery and extra piece sacrafice to misdirect the opponent into chasing the wrong piece.

  • @lourdjonsalen8465
    @lourdjonsalen8465 Год назад

    cool, now we can finally use the "just place a big mirror behind the opponent" strategy