Chinese Chess

Posted on Thursday, December 8th, 2005 at 3:01 am

Chinese Chess
What are some tips in playing chinese chess?

what are some tips in playing chinese chess such as openings. please help me

The game is also known as “chinese checkers”. One of the best places to get this sort of help is to have a look at some of the on line sites that discuss the game. Here are a couple of sites that should help you. You’ll find many others if you do a search for “how to play chinese checkers” or “how to play chinese chess”. Best of luck with it.

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Chinese Chess

Chinese Chess (Xiàngqí) is a game for two people playing in opposition. Both players start with 16 pieces depicting various Chinese characters, each with their own strengths and weaknesses. Play is turn-based, with Red starting.
  Anciently China had 4 traditional arts: music, painting, calligraphy, and Strategy Games.  The second syllable of  Xiangqi, “qi” is the Chinese word for strategy games.  The first syllable, “xiang” is the word for elephant.  This spelling is Mandarin, in Cantonese the game is called Jeuhng Keih.
  Like Western chess, Chinese chess descends from the game of Chaturanga, from India.  From India it spread throughout Asia and also to Medieval.  In China, the game reached its current form during the Song Dynasty (960-1279 AD).

The Board
The Chinese chess board is made up of 10 horizontal lines (ranks) and 9 vertical lines (files).  The pieces are placed on the lines rather than in the squares as in Western chess.  The lines are broken by the blank space that runs horizontally through the middle of the board.  The blank space is the river.  At each end there is a square with intersecting diagonals.  These are the palaces, one for red, and one for black.  The other markings are for aids in placement of the pieces at the beginning of the game.
If you want to learn more about Chinese chess,check out  . You Can have a try and download on it.
The Pieces
The Pieces are round disks made of plastic, wood, etc.  Usually the colors are red and black, and the pieces are identified by the Chinese character written on them. 
Image Name (Western Equivalant) Pronuciation (Mandarin) Number  On Each Side Abbreviation
? or ? General (King)  jiang1/ shuai 1 K
?or ? Mandarin or Assistant (Queen)  shi4 2 M or A
? or ? Elephant (Bishop) xiang4 2 E
? Horse (Knight) ma3 2 H or N
? Chariot (Rook) che1 2 R
? Cannon  pao4 2 C
? or ? Soldier (Pawn) zu2/bing1 5 P

Movement of Pieces

Except the cannon, all pieces capture in the same manner that they move.

? or ?    General (King)
Any 1 point on the grid in an orthogonal (non-diagonal) direction within the palace.  It cannot leave the palace except in a theoretical move when it moves along a file from its own palace to the enemy’s palace thus capturing the enemy’s general.  Therefore it is illegal to make any move that leaves Your Own general in an open file opposite the enemy’s general because it places your general in check.

?or ?    Mandarin or Assistant (Queen)
1 point diagonally within the palace, i.e. it cannot leave the palace. 

? or ?    Elephant (Bishop)
2 points in any diagonal direction.  Cannot leap over any piece.  Also it cannot cross the river.

?    Horse (Knight)
1 point in an orthogonal (non-diagonal) direction followed by one point in a diagonal point thus ending two points away from starting position.  It may not leap over other pieces (i.e. if there is a piece of either color at the elbow point then it cannot move in that direction).

?    Chariot (Rook)
Moves any number of points either horizontally or vertically but not diagonally; it cannot leap other pieces (same as a rook).

?    Cannon
When not capturing a piece it moves exactly as a chariot.  In order to capture a piece it must leap another piece of either color before landing on the point of the captured piece.  It cannot leap over more than one piece but it can leap the river when capturing.
  
? or ?   Soldier (Pawn)
1 point forward. After it crosses the river it can move 1 point forward or 1 point sideways.  It never moves backwards or diagonally.  Unlike Western chess it captures the same as it moves, either forward or after crossing the river sideways, never diagonally.  Pawns do not promote; when they reach the end of the board they can then either move right or left (sideways).

Rules
1. Red moves first.
2. The game is won by either checkmating or stalemating the enemy General.
3. You cannot perpetual check. For example you cannot check the opponent more than 3 times in a row with the same piece or the same board position.
4. You cannot force an enemy piece to move perpetually between two points to avoid capture.  If this occurs then the person attacking must withdraw the attack.
5. The game is a draw when neither side can force either checkmate or stalemate.

If you want to learn more about Chinese chess,check out http://www.chesssoul.com/index.html . You can have a try and download on it.

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