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Encyclopedia > Chess handicap

Handicap in chess is a way to equal chances for players of different strengths. There are many kinds of handicaps in chess: material handicaps, move handicaps, time handicaps etc. Handicaps were quite popular in 18th and 19th centuries, when the chess was often played for money stakes and a weaker player wouldn't accept the challenge without a handicap. However in our time playing with handicaps is much less common. Chess is an abstract strategy board game for two players. ...

Contents


Standard handicap system

The following system was used by chess players in 18th and 19th century when playing for money stakes (in increasing handicap level):

  • Move: weaker player gets white.
  • Two moves: weaker player gets white and makes two moves at the game start.
  • Pawn and move: weaker player gets white and the black pawn f7 is removed from the board.
  • Knight odds: stronger player plays without a knight. Usually this is a queen's knight on b1.
  • Rook odds: stronger player plays without a rook. Usually this is a queen's rook on a1.
  • Queen odds: stronger player plays without the queen.

The pawn (♙♟) is the weakest and most numerous piece in the game of chess, representing infantry, or more particularly pikemen. ... The knight moves in an L shape. ... A rook (borrowed from Persian رخ rokh) is a piece in the strategy board game of chess. ... Queen. ...

Time handicap

Time handicaps are usually practiced in blitz games. The stronger player gets less time. For example, stronger player gets 2 minutes per game and weaker player 5 minutes. Blitz, the German word for lightning, and often used figuratively as in blitzschnell (as fast as lightning), may mean any of a number of things in English: Blitzkrieg, the lightning war strategy of WWII Germany The Blitz, the German aerial attacks on Britain in WWII Baedeker Blitz, the reprisal bombing...


Other forms of handicap

There are other forms of handicap, which however are very rarely used:

  • Pion coiffĂ© (or capped pawn): stronger player needs to deliver checkmate with a pawn to win.
  • Odds of the draw: draw considered as a win for weaker player.
  • Stronger player plays start of the game, for example 10-20 moves, blindfold. More commonly, the stronger player plays the whole game that way.
  • The weaker player can take back any sequence of 3 moves in the course of game, but only do it two times.

In chess, pion coiffé is the handicap of undertaking to make the mating move with a particular pawn, which is usually marked at the start of play. ... Blindfold Chess is a way to play chess, whereby play is conducted without the players having sight of the positions of the pieces, or any physical contact with them. ...

References

  • D.B. Pritchard (1994). The Encyclopedia of Chess Variants (p. 212, Odds). ISBN 0952414201.

External links

  • Odds chess by Roger Cooper.

  Results from FactBites:
 
NodeWorks - Encyclopedia: Chess (1228 words)
Chess is one of the world's most popular games; it has been described not only as a game, but also as an art, science, and sport.
Chess is sometimes seen as an abstract wargame; as a "mental martial art", and teaching chess has been advocated as a way of enhancing mental prowess.
Chess eventually reached Russia via Mongolia, where it was played at the beginning of the 7th century.
Handicap - LoveToKnow 1911 (509 words)
HANDICAP (from the expression hand in cap, referring to drawing lots), a disadvantageous condition imposed upon the superior competitor in sports and games, or an advantage allowed the inferior, in order to equalize the chances of both.
The character of the handicap depends upon the nature of the sport.
Handicapping was applied to horse-racing as early as 1680, though the word was not used in this connexion much before the middle of the 18th century.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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