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Games Games Games Magazine
March 1999
David Pritchard
UK
Bosworth is a chess variant
(remember how Dickey III, hard pressed at the time,
went around offering his kingdom for a knight?). The
game, which is for 2-4 players, is played with cards
on a 4 x 4 board with four 4 x 1 extensions (players'
home bases of 'field camps', illustrated with a line
of tents which have to do with Bosworth Field not nothing
to do with the game). In short, a 6 x 6 board with the
corner squares removed.
Each player has a set of 16 cards illustrated with
the normal chess pieces in a distinctive color. The
rules are simple. The pieces (cards) are moved exactly
like their chess counterparts except that there is no
checking, casting or pawn promotion. A player whose
king is captured is out of the game; his men are removed
from the board and his victor is awarded the loser's
queen, which can be immediately brought into play, as
a reward. The last surviving player is the winner.
Players start by placing four pawns in their field
camps, shuffling the remainder of their packs and taking
the four top cards into hand. A move can only be make
with a piece on the board, thus the first move of each
player must be a pawn move. When a square in a field
camp is vacated it is filled from that player's hand
who then draws another card to maintain his hand of
four cards. Unless you are a genius or dead stupid you
will play out your king last.
The four-player game is the most fun and proved very
popular at Essen where three tables were in almost constant
use throughout the fair. And fun
is the right word. Although this is a lot of skill in
Bosworth the accent is on entertainment.
My one objection to the game is the award of the opponent's
queen for capturing his king. Two reasons: it is both
ugly and confusing (the conqueror is not fielding an
additional piece of another color), and it dramatically
upset the power balance. Both faults could be overcome
by allowing the victor to reclaim any piece previously
forfeited, which is then place at the bottom of his
remaining card stack. The prototype was briefly reviewed
by Pevans in GS: 121. The cards are attractively designed
and game is sturdily packaged. It has been recommended
by several writers.
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