Hexagonal Chess
1936
Designed by Władyslaw Gliński
Published by John Jaques of London, Spółdzielnia Pracy "Jedność" Cieszyn, John Jaques of London, (Web published), WOSI "Wspólna Sprawa", The Game Crafter, LLC, The Game Crafter, LLC
Over the years a number of chess variants have been proposed for boards featuring hexagonally shaped cells (commonly called hexes). The most popular of these is Hexagonal Chess which was invented in 1936 by Wladyslaw Glinski of Poland. David Pritchard says, in the Encyclopedia of Chess Variants, that Glinski's game is played by over half-a-million people, mostly in Eastern Europe. It features a hexagonally-shaped (of course) 3-colour board. Otherwise, it differs from traditional chess in that it has 9 pawns and three bishops--one for each colour. The set-up naturally varies from that of a square board, but beyond that, much of the play is fairly similar.
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Game data sourced from BoardGameGeek, used under their API terms.
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