Crazyhouse
Encyclopedia
Crazyhouse is a chess
Chess
Chess is a two-player board game played on a chessboard, a square-checkered board with 64 squares arranged in an eight-by-eight grid. It is one of the world's most popular games, played by millions of people worldwide at home, in clubs, online, by correspondence, and in tournaments.Each player...

 variant
Chess variant
A chess variant is a game related to, derived from or inspired by chess. The difference from chess might include one or more of the following:...

 similar to bughouse chess
Bughouse chess
Bughouse chess is a popular chess variant played on two chessboards by four players in teams of two...

, but with only two players. It effectively incorporates a rule in shogi
Shogi
, also known as Japanese chess, is a two-player board game in the same family as Western chess, chaturanga, and Chinese Xiangqi, and is the most popular of a family of chess variants native to Japan...

 (Japanese chess), in which a player can introduce a captured piece back to the board as his own.

Rule differences from normal chess

  • A captured piece reverses colour and goes to the capturing player's 'reserve', or 'pocket'. At any time, instead of making a move with a piece on a board, a player can 'drop' a piece, in his reserve, onto an empty square on the board.
  • Promoted but captured pawns are dropped as pawns.
  • Pawns must not be dropped on the first or eighth ranks.
  • Drops which cause immediate checkmate
    Checkmate
    Checkmate is a situation in chess in which one player's king is threatened with capture and there is no way to meet that threat. Or, simply put, the king is under direct attack and cannot avoid being captured...

     are allowed. Unlike in shogi, this includes pawn drops.
  • A check that would cause checkmate, in regular chess, can be answered if the defender can make a legal drop which blocks the check.

Notation

When recording games, an extension of the usual algebraic notation
Algebraic notation
Algebraic notation can mean:* In mathematics and computers, infix notation, the practice of representing a binary operator and operands with the operator between the two operands...

 for chess is used, so that drops can be specified. Drops first give the piece type, followed by an @ symbol, then the target square. For example, "P@d5" means "pawn is dropped on d5 from reserve".

Strategy

Crazyhouse, which has been analysed much less than regular chess, requires different strategies. Pawns and knights increase in relative importance in crazyhouse, while rooks, queens, and bishops decrease in relative importance. If a king is put in check by any of the latter three pieces, from two or more squares away, dropping a pawn next to the king becomes defensively useful. A knight, on the other hand, cannot be blocked by anything and its offensive value is more manifest. That piece can be used effectively to maintain a strategic influence over a region. After an early exchange of queens, it is usually unwise to reintroduce the queen too soon, particularly if she can be harassed by dropped minor pieces. Careful preparation is needed, in order to reintroduce the queen to maximum effect. Pawns could be dropped deep in the enemy position where, for example, they can fork pieces or give an uncomfortable check.

Variations

Minor variations of the rules are possible, such as:
  • Loop Chess - promoted pawns keep their rank when captured.
  • Chessgi, Neo Chess - promoted pawns keep their rank when captured; pawns may be dropped on the first rank.

External links

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