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Makruk (thai หมากรุก) (or Thai Chess. Expressed "Makruk", with a low-"shaking" tone while saying "Mak" and a high-level tone when saying "ruk") is a board game descended from the 6th century Indian game of chaturanga or a close relative thereof, and therefore related to Western chess. It is regarded as the most similar living game to this common ancestor of all chess variants. Makruk is popular in Thailand and Cambodia.

Rules


Pieces

In starting position, pawns are placed on 3rd and 6th rank. Queens are placed at the right side of Kings. Pawns promote to Queens when they reach 6th rank. There is no castling.

Counting rules

When neither side has any pawns the game must be completed within a certain number of moves or it is declared a draw. When a piece is captured the count starts again from scratch.

When one side has no major pieces left (rook, knight or bishop) the stronger side is given a count value based on pieces it has left:

From these starting values, subtract 1 for each piece on the board. The resulting number is how many moves the stronger side has to win, otherwise the game becomes a draw.

For example, if white has two rooks and a knight against a lone black king, he has 3 moves to checkmate his opponent (the given value of 8 minus the total number of pieces, 5). If black captures a white rook, the count restarts and white now has 12 moves to checkmate his opponent (the given value of 16 minus the total number of pieces, 4).

References


External links


Chess variants | Chaturanga game family | Makruk | Ajedrez tailandés | Makruk | マークルック | หมากรุกไทย | 泰國象棋

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Makruk".

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