Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
An example of a Kriegspiel problem is shown at the right.
Things should happen and not be decided," in opposition to the general nature of Kriegspiel play.
There are several different rule sets for Kriegspiel.
Frankenstein suggested in 1903 a variation of the game where one player sees the board and another plays Kriegspiel.
Otherwise the rules are as in usual kriegspiel.
The book also relates pre-video game relationship between war and games, such as the evolution of chess into kriegspiel.
Since the position of the opponent's pieces is unknown, Kriegspiel is not a game with perfect information.
Kriegspiel is sometimes used in chess problems.
Dark chess is a chess variant with incomplete information, similar to Kriegspiel.
For playing over-the-board, three chess sets and a referee are needed, just as in Kriegspiel.
Kriegspiel: neither player knows where the opponent's pieces are but can deduce them with information from a referee.
In Kriegspiel (the "war game") each player has a chessboard, and a referee has one as well.
There is also a chess variant called Kriegspiel, in which the players lack knowledge of the position of the opponent's pieces.
The international money game might more aptly be compared to the game of Kriegspiel, a complicated form of chess.
But the real-world currency game is not as simple as Kriegspiel, which assumes that just one player sits at each board.
Then he uttered the extraordinary word: " Kriegspiel."
Chess Kriegspiel derives from a war game which was used in 19th century Germany to train military officers.
The idea that historical simulation consists of eccentric men playing with toy soldiers does little justice to the modern war game of Kriegspiel.
In this respect it resembles somewhat such chess variants as Kriegspiel or Dark chess.
The northern third of Natal is as vulnerable a military position as a player of kriegspiel could wish to have submitted to him.
Kriegspiel (chess)
The most widespread rules are those used on the Internet Chess Club, where Kriegspiel is called Wild 16.
Kriegspiel (2 participants)
KriegSpiel (3 participants)
Increasingly realistic variations became part of military training in the 19th century in many nations, and were called "kriegspiel" or "wargames".