Shatra is a chess-like game which was played in the Altai region. It can be seen as a mixture between chess and draughts.[2]

Shatra
Board with placed pieces in their starting positions. The ditch is marked as bold line, the temdek is indicated by a cross.
GenresBoard game
Abstract strategy game
Players2
Setup time<1 minute
Playing time30 minutes – 2 hours
ChanceNone
Age range7+[1]
SkillsStrategy, tactics

General rules

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Shatra is played on board of 62 tiles which are divided into 3 areas: The central area of 7x6 tiles and two 3x3 tiles (fortresses), which are connected via 1 tile (temdek) to the central board. The central area is divided horizontally by a ditch. Each player has 1 king, 1 queen, 2 rooks, 2 bishops and 11 pawns (shatras). The pieces move as in chess. The pieces placed in the fortress are called reserves and are unable to be moved. Instead they can be placed on any free tile of the board on the own site of the central board (reaching from the temdek to the central ditch) at any given time.[2] Dropping a piece from the fortress onto the central board ends the turn of the player. If a piece within the fortress makes a capture, it has to be moved to the own site of the board in the next round. Vacation of the fortress leads to the removal of the respective temdek, allowing captures from the field back into the fortress. The only piece that can move independently from the temdek is the king.[2]

The ditch in the central board is used as marker: If shatras cross the ditch, they can be moved like kings.

Pieces are captured like in draughts by "jumping over an adjacent piece to an empty square immediately beyond".[2] Thereby, shatras and the king perform a so called "short leap", meaning they can only jump over pieces directly adjacent to them, while queens, rooks and bishops are able to perform a "long leap", meaning they can "move over any number of vacant squares and leap over an opposing man to any vacant square beyond".[2] Capturing is compulsory for every piece except the king, meaning that every capture that is possible has to be performed. If after capturing a second capture is possible at the new position, it also has to be performed. If the new position allows multiple pathways to capture opposing tiles, the path leading to most captures has to be chosen. One piece cannot be jumped over in a multiple capture scenario. If a shatra promotes after a capture, it has to continue capturing as the promoted piece if that allows more captures.

Goal of the game is to capture or stalemate the opposing king or cause.[2]

Pieces & movement patterns

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Piece Symbol Movement
Shatra     
King     
Queen     
Rook     
Bishop     

■ One tile move ⚫ Unlimited movement x Position of the piece

References

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  1. ^ "TIP: anyone over the age of 7 or so can play". Mohr, Merilyn Simonds (1997). The New Games Treasury. Houghton Mifflin Company. p. 46. ISBN 1-57630-058-7.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Brine), Pritchard, D. Brine (David (2007). The classified encyclopedia of chess variants. Beasley, John D. (John Derek), 1940- (2nd ed.). Harpenden, England: J. Beasley. ISBN 9780955516801. OCLC 225581479.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)