Thai Chess: A Digital Strategy Game
Thai Chess, a game played on an 8x8 board, shares similarities with classical chess but features key distinctions. The initial setup mirrors classical chess, except for two crucial differences: the white queen starts on e1 and the white king on d1 (each king positioned to the left of its queen from the player's perspective); and pawns are positioned on the third rank for white and the sixth for black.
(Replace https://images.0516f.complaceholder_image_url.jpg with actual image URL)
Piece Movement:
- King: Moves one square horizontally, vertically, or diagonally. Castling is not permitted.
- Queen: Moves only one square diagonally.
- Rook: Moves any number of unoccupied squares horizontally or vertically.
- Bishop: Moves one square diagonally in any direction or one square forward vertically.
- Knight: Moves in an "L" shape (two squares in one direction, then one square perpendicularly), as in classical chess.
- Pawn: Moves one square forward vertically and captures one square diagonally forward, similar to classical chess. Pawns promote only to queens upon reaching the sixth rank.
Game Modes:
Thai Chess offers various gameplay options: single-player against artificial intelligence, two-player on a single device, and online multiplayer against opponents.
Winning the Game:
Checkmating the opponent's king secures victory, as in classical chess. A stalemate results in a draw.