Chess Variants/Atomic Chess
Introduction
[edit | edit source]Atomic Chess is an explosive variant that changes how captures work - all captures result in an explosion that removes nearby pieces from play.
History
[edit | edit source]Atomic chess was introduced in 1995 by the German Internet Chess Server (GICS), based on rules a GICS member collected from friends. From there it spread to other smaller chess servers before being added to Lichess.org in 2015 and Chess.com in late 2020.
Rules
[edit | edit source]In normal chess, when a piece makes a capture it moves to the square the enemy piece was on, and the enemy piece is removed from the board. However, in atomic chess when a piece makes a capture, an explosion occurs which covers a three-by-three radius of squares around the square where the capturing piece lands. Any non-pawn pieces caught in the radius of the explosion are removed from the board. The capturing piece is also removed.
Pawns are only removed if they are involved directly in a capture.
If an en passant capture takes place, the centre of the explosion is on the square where the capturing pawn would have otherwise landed.
A player may never make a capture that would result in their own king being blown up in the resulting explosion. As a result, kings are not allowed to make captures in atomic chess, and kings may position themselves on adjacent squares. Also, a player may not make a capture if the resulting explosion would expose their king to check.
If a player's king is blown up, they automatically lose the game.
A player may respond to check by making a capture that blows up the enemy king, if such a capture is available.
Sub-variants
[edit | edit source]This chess variant does not not have any notable sub-variants.