If you are satisfied with your move, press F to submit it. Click the space you would like to move that piece to. The Spaces that it is able to move to will be highlighted in green if highlighting is enabled (you can press H to toggle highlighting). To move a piece in the game, click on the piece you would like to move. Note that the first space a pawn moves through is represented by a semitransparent pawn, or ghost pawn, after the pawn moves the second time and this ghost pawn disappears on the next turn of the player that moved that pawn because it will thenceforth be irrelevant. If you're opponent moved a pawn two spaces during their last turn, you may capture that pawn with a pawn as if it was on the first space that it moved to during that turn. A pawn may capture a piece by moving one space diagonally such that the diagonal includes one direction that is perpendicular to your opponent's back plane and one direction that is parallel to your opponent's back plane. On the first turn a pawn is moved, it may move twice however, if it does, it cannot capture a piece on that turn. Pawn: A pawn may move one space forward or one space up (up is towards your opponent's back plane) as long as the target space is not occupied by any piece (it cannot capture in this way). The spaces that the knight moves through to get to it's destination may be occupied. Knight: Moves two spaces in one dimension and then one space in a different dimension. This means that all spaces accessible to a king will be within a 3x3x3x3 tesseract centered on the king (although this tesseract may, of course, be cut off by board edges). King: Moves the same way a queen does except it may only move one space per turn. Queen: May move orthogonally, diagonally, triagonally, or quadragonally. Unicorn: Moves triagonally (in three dimensions at a time).ĭragon: Moves qua dragonally (in four dimensions at a time). Rook: Moves orthogonally (in one dimension at a time).īishop: Moves diagonally (in two dimensions at a time). *Note that there is now an in game tutorial that thoroughly explains piece movement The game board is a 4x4x4x4 tesseract however, the entire board is represented in 2 dimensions by displaying 16 4x4 square slices of 4 4x4x4 cube slices of the 4x4x4x4 tesseract. *Note that there is now an in game tutorial that explains how the 2D representation of the 4D board in 4D chess is interpreted.
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