If you've poked around the Chess Variant Pages crafts section, you may have come across my EconoSplurge Chess Variant Set, which is an attempt to combine some beautiful (but fairly expensive) wooden Exchess variant pieces with variant boards made of versatile, inexpensive single squares of coloured felt.
I've wanted to make a Dragonchess board with my EconoSplurge set for a while. Dragonchess is a huge 3D variant invented by Gary Gygax of Dungeons & Dragons fame, featuring three 8x12 boards in a stack. It's well described on the ChessVariants.org Dragonchess page. This article describes how I made my set.
Here is a photographic overview of the three Dragonchess boards, both with and without pieces. One thing the Dragonchess page does not mention is that the three boards are supposed to be different colours. The bottom Underworld board is coloured brown and red instead of black and white, the middle Earth board is coloured green and amber, and the top Sky board is coloured blue and white. While I couldn't very well stack floppy felt in three dimensions, and had to lay the boards along the plane of the table instead (an option Gygax himself mentions), I'm happy to say the colours worked out well, at least.
This section shows close-ups of the Dragonchess pieces. Besides the board colours, the piece colours are also unusual in Dragonchess. Instead of White and Black, the sides are supposed to be Gold and Scarlet, respectively. There was no way I was going to paint my Exchess pieces Gold and Scarlet -- they're the Splurge part of my EconoSplurge set after all -- so I made do with the usual colours. I hope you'll agree the setup still looks nice.
As I mentioned, Dragonchess is supposed to be a three dimensional chess variant, with one board stacked above another. I feel I've cheated my readers somewhat of its 3Dness by laying the boards out side by side. As compensation, I'm offering these stereograms (three-dimensional photographs) of the board and pieces. The first (Figure 8) is a 3D detail of the photo above (Figure 7). The second (Figure 9) is a somewhat overexposed 3D shot of Black's array on the Earth board. The last one (Figure 10) is the best, a 3D shot of the whole board with considerable depth.
These stereograms are of the "cross-eye" variety rather than the "wide-eye" variety. For instructions on how to look at them, please consult Mark Newbold's page, which has a simple example for practice viewing.
Please be gentle with me; these are some of my first stereograms. Now how about some juicy 3D photos of a real 3D chess variant board, like a plexiglass Dragonchess set or Star Trek Tridimensional chess? Anyone?
The following table describes which Exchess pieces I used to represent Dragonchess pieces, how many are needed per side, and mnemonic rationales for assigning the pieces that way, with a few other notes.
I own Exchess sets 1+C and 2, that is, Exchess sets 1 and 2, plus set C, which contains matching pieces for orthodox Chess and can be purchased at a discount with set 1. I found this gave me enough pieces for everything except the 12 Warriors per side that I needed, which roughly correspond to pawns on the middle board. I bought a set of hardwood checkers without a board at Uncle's Games that roughly matched my Exchess pieces in colour. Since there are 12 checkers per side in the version of checkers played most commonly in the US, I had exactly enough for my Warriors.
Where the table says that a piece is marked, that means I snapped a rubber band around it. As you can see in the photos above, the Black (Scarlet) pieces have yellow bands, and the White (Gold) pieces have pink ones. These were the rubber bands with the highest contrast I had on hand, but maybe they should be reversed for the sake of mnemonic clarity.
Dragonchess piece | Exchess piece | Number per side | Notes/mnemonics |
Basilisk | marked rapid pawn | 2 | Bottom board. Same starting positions as the Griffons (unmarked rapid pawns) on the top board. |
Cleric | Herald | 1 | Trumpet announcing an important religious figure. |
Dragon | Amazon | 1 | Scary looking. |
Dwarf | t-pawn | 6 | Shorter and squatter than ordinary pawns (Sylphs). |
Elemental | Parachutist | 1 | Looks like a whirlwind (air elemental). |
Griffon | rapid pawn | 2 | Top board. Same starting positions as the Basilisks (marked rapid pawns) on the bottom board. |
Hero | marked pawn | 2+ | Warriors promote to Heroes, so it's good to be able to make a lot of them. Just snap a rubber band around a captured Sylph (pawn) and you've got another Hero. |
King | King | 1 | The King in Dragonchess and orthodox Chess are nearly identical. |
Mage | Magician | 1 | Wears a wizard hat. |
Oliphant | Rook | 2 | The Oliphant moves just like the orthodox Rook. Also, medieval Rook pieces often depicted an elephant with a castle on its back. Gary Gygax almost certainly knew this. |
Paladin | Veteran | 1 | Wears a helmet. |
Sylph | pawn | 6 | Taller and thinner than t-pawns (Dwarves). |
Thief | Bishop | 2 | The Thief moves just like the orthodox Bishop. Also, think televangelists. |
Unicorn | Knight | 2 | The Unicorn moves just like an orthodox Knight. Also, unicorns look like horses. |
Warrior | (checker) | 12 | There are just enough checkers in an ordinary Checkers set to provide twelve Warriors for each side. |
Thanks to geometer and expert stereoscopist John Braley for helping me get these images right. Thanks to master editor Marty Hale-Evans for a light edit. Thanks to both of them for dissuading me from using wiggle stereograms. The Dramamine is on the way.
That's it! Live in Seattle and want to play?