Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Laser Chess

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Developer(s)
  
Mike Duppong

Initial release date
  
April 1987


Designer(s)
  
Mike Duppong

Genre
  
Strategy game

Laser Chess wwwmyabandonwarecommediascreenshotsllaserch

Publisher
  
COMPUTE! Publications, Inc.

Platforms
  
DOS, Commodore 64, Atari ST, Atari 8-bit family, AmigaOS, Apple II

Similar
  
LA Crackdown, Lords of Conquest, Red Lightning, Annals of Rome, Chess 2: The Sequel

Laser chess 1992 gameplay pc game 1992


Laser Chess is a two-player computer game from 1987, modeled as a board game with chess-like pieces, most of which have mirrored surfaces, and one of which is a laser cannon.

Contents

Laser Chess first appeared in Compute!'s Atari ST Disk & Magazine in 1987, written in Modula-2, winning the $5,000 first prize in a programming competition held by the magazine. Ports of the game written in BASIC and machine language were published in the June 1987 issue of COMPUTE! Magazine for the Commodore Amiga, Commodore 64, Apple II, and Atari 8-bit as type-in programs. Laser Chess has been re-implemented many times over the years, including a variant Advanced Laser Chess with a larger board and additional pieces.

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Game play

Players take alternate turns taking two actions with their pieces. An action consists of moving a piece vertically or laterally, rotating a piece 90 degrees, or "firing" the laser cannon. A teleporter piece can teleport pieces that it lands on.

Moving a distance of one square takes one action; moving two squares takes two actions Since a player has only two actions per turn, the maximum distance a piece can be moved on one turn is two squares. Pieces can be moved forward, backward, left, or right, but not diagonally. However, a player can effectively move a piece diagonally by using two actions—forward and right, for example.

Firing the laser

On a player's turn, the player can elect to fire the laser cannon. Firing the laser cannon takes only one action, but can be done only once per turn. Therefore, a player may want to use the first action in a turn to aim the laser, rotate a reflecting piece to set up a reflected shot, or move another piece into position. Laser beams are absorbed if they hit the edge of the board.

The laser will bounce off any mirrored piece, so both a player's own and the opponent's pieces may be used to set up a shot. Since a player is focused on creating a path from that player's laser cannon to a target of interest, the player must be aware that he or she is also creating a path to his or her laser at the same time.

References

Laser Chess Wikipedia