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Book preview
Chess Mazes 1 - Bruce Alberston
Chess Mazes
A new kind of chess puzzle
for everyone
by Bruce Alberston
Chess Mazes
© Copyright 2004
Bruce Albeston
All Rights Reserved
ISBN: 1-888690-19-4
Published by:
Russell Enterprises, Inc.
P.O. Box 3131
Milford, CT 06460 USA
http://www.russell-enterprises.com
info@russell-enterprises.com
Cover design by Pamela Terry, Opus 1 Design.
Printed in the United States of America
Table of Contents
Ackowledgements, Signs and Symbols
Introduction to Chess Mazes
Chapter One — Bishop, Rook, and Knight Mazes
Bishop Mazes — Problems 1-34
Rook Mazes — Problems 35-68
Knight Mazes — Problems 69-102
Chapter Two — Queen, Pawn, and King Mazes
Queen Mazes — Problems 103-136
Pawn Mazes — Problems 137-170
King Mazes — Problems 171-204
Solutions to Chess Mazes
Bishop Mazes — Problems 1-34
Rook Mazes — Problems 35-68
Knight Mazes — Problems 69-102
Queen Mazes — Problems 103-136
Pawn Mazes — Problems 137-170
King Mazes — Problems 171-204
Appendix
Acknowledgements
Special thanks to Fred Wilson who suggested the title and who has also composed some wicked mazes in his time. Also, thanks to Hannon Russell and his crew for recognizing an original idea and putting it all together.
Signs, Symbols
! a strong move
!! a brilliant or unobvious move
? a weak move, an error
?? a grave error
!? a move worth consideration
?! a dubious move
# mate
Introduction
Chess Mazes is chess. The pieces are the same. They move and capture just the same. Check and checkmate are exactly the same. But there is one significant difference. The alternation of moves rule has been suspended. That means only one side gets to make moves. That side is White. Poor Black never gets to make any moves. All he can do it sit back and watch.
As a chess teacher I’ve tried out various techniques to develop visualization and planning skills for my students. The ideal planning situation is where one side gets to make a plan and carry it through without hindrance or interference from the opponent. How do you do that? Don’t let him move.
That’s how Chess Mazes was born. And without realizing it at the time, I had also invented a new kind of chess puzzle.
To do chess mazes it’s assumed that you know:
(1) How the pieces move,
(2) Rules for check and checkmate,
(3) Chess notation.
If you are not familiar with chess notation, don’t worry. You can easily figure out how to decipher it from the examples given. So let’s get down to rules. We’ll take bishop mazes as the sample. This is appropriate since the first maze I ever composed was a bishop maze.
Rules for Bishop Mazes (and Rook & Knight)
Rule Number One: You are White and your maze piece is the bishop. You can move that bishop around the board at will or almost at will. The one restriction is Rule Four. Only the white bishop is allowed to move.
Rule Number Two: Black gets a king and some pieces, the number of which will vary from position to position. However, none of the black pieces, king included, is allowed to move. This makes Black a passive, stationary, observer. He gets to observe the white bishop as it moves around the board. The one exception is Rule Four.
Rule Number Three: The game ends when the bishop places the black king in check. That’s it. Put the enemy king in danger, put him in check, and the maze is solved. Sound easy doesn’t it?
Rule Number Four: You may not place your bishop (maze piece) on a square where it is subject to capture by a Black unit. You do that, place your guy en prise, then Black is allowed to move, take your piece and White loses. You have to start over.
Rule Number Five: We give only the shortest solution in the back of the book. If the maze can be solved in X number of moves and it took you X plus one, well, you sort of solved it, but not in the most efficient manner. You won’t find your solution given.
Bishop Mazes in Action
Now that you know the rules for bishop mazes let’s see how it works in practice. We begin with sample position number one.
#1
You know what you have to do — put the black king in check. The one move that you may not make is 1.Bh6-g7+.
#1a
True, the black king is in check and it only took you one move to do it. But you’ve violated Rule Number Four — you put your bishop in danger, on a square where it can be captured. The black king can just take you off by 1...Kh8xg7. And that you cannot allow.
So, what can you do? It turns out that you have no less than five different ways to solve the maze. Here are the solutions:
1) 1.Bh6-g5 2. Bg5-f6+
2) 1.Bh6-f4 2. Bf4-e5+
3) 1.Bh6-e3 2. Be3-d4+
4) 1.Bh6-d2 2. Be3-c3+
5) 1.Bh6-c1 2. Bc1-b2+
But a problem with five correct solutions is not much of a problem. What we’re going to do is cut down your options, so there is really only one way (occasionally two) to solve the maze. If you have too many ways out, then it’s not a very good maze. So, here is the same position with a slight adjustment.
#2
By adding the black knight on f3 we’ve created a whole series of mined squares where the bishop may not go to. We already know about g7, the black king guards it. And the knight takes away g5, d2, e5, and d4. There are other squares as well but we mention only the most critical. That leaves only one solution, namely 1.Bc1 and 2.Bb2+.
#2a
I trust you found it. And what happens if you used, say, three moves: 1.Bf8 2.Ba3 3.Bb2+. Well, you’re on your own in this case, because the only solution given is the one with the fewest number of moves, which in this instance is two. Try and get into the habit of doing things in the shortest possible way. Now let’s look at position #3.
#3