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I find it a bit crazy how there's no ''Evolution deck'' in this game. It's a bit weird how even after all the rules adjustments made over the years, it's all still completely random.
This is great! Idk how I’ve never thought to just RU-vid the rules for a game until now lol but this was perfect! In the amount of time it took to watch this, I have a complete grasp of how to play where the same time had me already confused when reading just the first page of rules lol
What about a variant where you can check and keep going but not allowed to capture then your opponent has their full set of moves to escape check (a king may not move to any squares in check though even if they have more moves after so have use other pieces)
I used to use dimes as damage counters and the winner pocketed the money when they knocked out a pokemon. Also, I only ever battled one person ever. Everyone else played Magic and Yugioh
This is the same game as another one covered by this channel, in the same "Chess Versions" playlist: Spherical chess. "Spherical chess" sells you a globe to play chess on, while "Noble Celts" sells you this vintage map, but what they really are is simply an aesthetic alternatives of a much simpler chess variant: playing on a normal chessboard, consider the left and right sides as adiacent to each other, allowing the pieces to teleport horizontally but not longitudinally. That's it, it's really that. It's one simple variant, with the titles "Spherical chess" and "Noble celts" simply selling you nice boards. Feel free to buy them if their aesthetic pleases you, just be aware of this and of what you are actually buying.
This is the same game as another one covered by this channel, in the same "Chess Versions" playlist: Noble Celts. "Spherical chess" sells you this globe to play chess on, while "Noble Celts" sells you a vintage map, but what they really are is simply an aesthetic alternatives of a much simpler chess variant: playing on a normal chessboard, consider the left and right sides as adiacent to each other, allowing the pieces to teleport horizontally but not longitudinally. That's it, it's really that. It's one simple variant, with the titles "Spherical chess" and "Noble celts" simply selling you nice boards. Feel free to buy them if their aesthetic pleases you, just be aware of this and of what you are actually buying.
Monopoly Deal Money Colors Comparison (2017 vs 2024) 2017 version: $1 = White $2 = Orange $3 = Green $4 = Blue $5 = Purple $10 = Red 2024 version (this video): $1 = White $2 = Red $3 = Blue $4 = Green $5 = Purple $10 = Orange
Is it really a random shuffle, or does it do a perfect shuffle? For reference, if you cut a new pack of 52 playing cards in half, then perfectly overlap them in a riffle shuffle 4 times, you'll end up with the same deck as when you started.
Only thing that would have been better is if you used sleeved cards for some of them. Aside from that, it looks like a good product, and could be used to quickly set up games. I see it more for use in a commercial setting, such as a game store, rather than home use, unless that home plays a lot of card games.
Question: it is my turn to move, and in the current position my pieces are checkmating one player; that player has lost _and their pieces are removed from the board_ but, by doing so, new "fields of vision" get opened to my pieces, which are now checkmating a second player. Has that second player also lost, even before I make my move?