King's RepositoryのロゴKing's Repository

Chess Variants/Losing Chess


a b c d e f g h
8 a8 black rook b8 black knight c8 black king d8 black queen e8 black king f8 black bishop g8 black knight h8 black rook 8
7 a7 black pawn b7 black bishop c7 black pawn d7 black pawn e7 black pawn f7 black pawn g7 black pawn h7 black pawn 7
6 a6 black king b6 black king c6 black king d6 black king e6 black king f6 black king g6 black king h6 black king 6
5 a5 black king b5 white bishop c5 black king d5 black king e5 black king f5 black king g5 black king h5 black king 5
4 a4 black king b4 black king c4 black king d4 black king e4 black king f4 black king g4 black king h4 black king 4
3 a3 black king b3 black king c3 black king d3 black king e3 white pawn f3 black king g3 black king h3 black king 3
2 a2 white pawn b2 white pawn c2 white pawn d2 white pawn e2 black king f2 white pawn g2 white pawn h2 white pawn 2
1 a1 white rook b1 white knight c1 white bishop d1 white queen e1 white king f1 black king g1 white knight h1 white rook 1
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In this position, with White to move, the rules of losing chess force White to capture the black pawn on d7 with the bishop. Black must then make a capture, and can choose between Qxd7, Kxd7, Nxd7 or Bxg2.

Introduction

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Losing Chess (also known as Antichess, Suicide Chess or Giveaway Chess) is an eccentric variant that inverses the normal rules of chess - you win by losing all of your pieces. It is one of the most popular chess variants out there.

History

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The origins of losing chess are unknown, but the earliest version of the variant was played in the 1870s. The variant began to gain popularity in the 20th century, facilitated by publications about the variant in the UK, Germany and Italy, and a new surge of popularity came when the variant was implemented on the Free Internet Chess Server (FICS) in 1996.

In 2016 the most commonly played version of losing chess was weakly solved as a win for White, beginning with 1. e3.

Rules

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There are slight variations in the rules from source to source, but this is the most common ruleset -

Losing chess is played mostly like the standard game. However, in losing chess captures are compulsory - if a player can make a capture, they must. If multiple captures are available, the capturing player may choose which capture to make.

The king in losing chess does not have royal power. Therefore a king may capture and be captured just like any other piece, there is no check or checkmate, and a pawn may promote to a king if that player wants.

A player wins by losing all of their pieces, or by being stalemated.

Sub-variants

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This chess variant does not not have any notable sub-variants.