![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Coming late to the party, as usual, but what the heck:
1. Navigated for an airplane at age seven.
2. Demonstrated (the hard way) why one should always wear a bicycle helmet.
3. Built the first known board for a game that hadn't been played for ~700 years.
4. Written a technical article that was obsolete before it was published.
5. Proven that it is possible (if deeply unwise) to turn a single-player videogame into a multi-player one.
(Was going to list "Participated in every extant Carolingian guild", but on review there are still two or three I haven't done yet...)
1. Navigated for an airplane at age seven.
2. Demonstrated (the hard way) why one should always wear a bicycle helmet.
3. Built the first known board for a game that hadn't been played for ~700 years.
4. Written a technical article that was obsolete before it was published.
5. Proven that it is possible (if deeply unwise) to turn a single-player videogame into a multi-player one.
(Was going to list "Participated in every extant Carolingian guild", but on review there are still two or three I haven't done yet...)
(no subject)
Date: 2008-07-01 12:01 am (UTC)Broadly speaking, period chess is like modern, except:
-- Queens move one space orthogonally;
-- Bishops have a short leap of two;
-- Some of the weird fiddly bits (castling, the initial pawn move) were occasional variants, rather than standard.
Overall, the result is a slower, more strategic game, with less of a tendency to turn suddenly...