Thư của Rick Knowlton Hoa Kỳ hỏi về luật chơi cờ tư lệnh

Submitted by haiduong on Mon, 02/15/2016 - 09:10

Lại có thư của Ancientchess Hoa Kỳ.
Dear Colonel Hai,

My friend Wayne Saunders is a marvelous game historian and game expert.
He has taken a special interest in Commander chess, and sent me this
picture of himself with the game. I hope you enjoy his photo and his
appreciation.

Rick Knowlton

Hỏi và trả lời
1) If you fire on a stack of pieces (such as a Navy carrying a Tank and Militia). are all of the pieces in the stack destroyed?
Exactly. If you fire on a stack of pieces (such as a Navy carrying an Air Force, a Tank and Militia; or an Air Force carrying a Tank and Militia, or a Tank carrying Militia) are all of the pieces in the stack destroyed

2) Is it possible for the Air Force to fly to a destination, putting the enemy Commander in check, and then fly back to its original point, all in one move? If so, this would make the Air Force a Heroic Piece?
Air Force can fly to defeat an opponent’s piece can either occupy the position of captured piece or fly back to its original, all in one move. An Air Force defeats another opponent’s aircraft will replace it also.
3) Is it possible for the Commander to have only one piece remaining (which becomes a heroic piece)? Would the game not already have ended when the Navy or Air Force was captured?
Even for the naval forces, air force, the army arrested, kept playing until enemy commander is defeated or 30 -minute game ends
4) When a Navy or Air Force arrives at its destination, can a carried piece move immediately from that point, or must it wait until the next turn?
It has to wait until the next turn to carry one more piece.

5) It is understood that the Anti-Aircraft gun and the Missile control air space. Does the Engineer also control air space?
Nope.

Rick Knowlton <rickofricks@gmail.com>
To Nguyen Quy Hai Feb 10 at 10:17 PM
Dear Colonel Hai,

Thank you so much for these thoughtful answers!
This is very helpful for us in understanding the finer points of the game.

Greatly Appreciated,
Rick