Tuesday, September 22, 2020

Dr Who set

I grew up with Doctor Who as a kid in the 1970s. Given that, Tom Baker will always be the Doctor for me. Nevertheless, I was really pleased the series was resurrected in 2005. 

When I saw this Doctor Who chess set on eBay, it was clear it had to be part of my collection!


The board is the usual simple cardboard board, and the pieces contain pictures of a range of characters from the recent series in a rather unusual way. The box refers to them being 'animated'; I'll come back to that ...


On the 'baddies' side (silver-grey tops), the pieces include Cybermen, a Weeping Angel as queen, and a Dalek as king.



The Doctor's side (blue tops) includes the Tardis and River Song, and has Amy Pond as queen and the Doctor (obviously) as king.



So what about the pieces being 'animated'? They have what's called 'lenticular animation', which means that the picture appears to move and change as you see it from different angles. 



I can't capture this effect in a few pictures; sorry!

Thursday, September 17, 2020

Alien set

Saw this 'Alien' set for sale on eBay, and I really liked the weird and, well, alien shapes. So ...

Felt it would look good on the board that came with my wood-and-metal set.


The pieces are 3D-printed and, while they really do look alien, their shapes still resemble traditionally-shaped pieces. It's not difficult to tell which pieces are the rook, knight and bishop, and queen and king are also easily recognisable.



To make a pretty short story even shorter: I'm quite pleased with this addition to the collection!

Tuesday, September 8, 2020

Golden xiangqi set

Xiangqi ('Chinese chess') is played on the intersection of lines rather than on the squares, as is the case for FIDE chess. Normally, a xiangqi board has lines, and play is on the points where the lines cross each other. I wanted to take this 'playing on the points' a bit further, and create a board which has no lines, just the points. My idea was to use gold-coloured drawing pins for these points, and to get a set of playing pieces to fit these drawing pins.

Getting a set of basic wooden pieces is easy enough ...


... and a specialised drill bit allowed me to 'hollow out' the underside of the pieces, such that they fit snugly over a drawing pin.












As the drawing pins are gold-coloured, I decided to paint the pieces gold as well.


On to creating the board. I had a nice piece of wood in the shed, which would work well with the gold drawing pins.

So here's the basic board, with drawing pins on all the points:


You may have noticed the gold-coloured wire in the picture above. I did say I wouldn't be having lines on the board, didn't I? What I meant there was not having any horizontal or vertical lines, but it is necessary to indicate the palaces and for that, I used that gold-coloured wire. I also highlighted the paths of the elephants/ministers with wire. First of all, doing that essentially indicates where the river is. Secondly, I have seen a xiangqi board where the moves of the elephants/ministers are indicated by lines, so there is precedence, although it's not normally part of a xiangqi board. And this is then what the completed board looks like:


The pieces fit well, I think!


Judge for yourself, but I am quite please with this 'golden' xiangqi set.




Thursday, September 3, 2020

Wood-and-metal set

When I saw this set on eBay, my initial thought was 'Italfama'. The listing didn't mention that, and the buy-it-now price was a magnitude below what you'd expect from an Italfama set, so I took the plunge; you never know, right?


There is nothing to suggest it actually is an Italfama set, no marking or brand name anywhere.





Italfama or not (almost surely not), I still very much like it!