That time National Lampoon made a parody chess game

That time National Lampoon made a parody chess game

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From 2010 to 2014 Richard Cobbett (opens in new tab) wrote Crapshoot, a column about rolling the dice to bring random games back into the light. This week, a sexier take on the game of kings that stops somewhat short of descending into hardcore pawn. (Though the king, in check, can get a little matey.)

What’s the funniest game ever made? If you’re thinking Twister in a poorly maintained nitrous oxide bottling plant, you’re wrong. Strip Tickle Jenga? Uh, pretty sure that doesn’t exist. You might want to consider whether you’re more gullible than you think, and prove you’re not by sending me all your money.

As far as National Lampoon was concerned in the ’90s though, no game had more potential for fun and frolics than chess. And they’d know! After all, they only put their names on the finest interactive comedy products. Like… uh… this! And, uh, Blind Date, which we may be getting to next Valentine’s Day. And absolutely nothing else I’m aware of, which surely almost probably guarantees they brought their A material. Right? I see no reason to be a Doubting Debbie about this. None whatsoever!

How cruel, Death. At least let her have a scythe of relief at the end of a long day.

How cruel, Death. At least let her have a scythe of relief at the end of a long day.

Essentially, this is of course Battle Chess, only played more for laughs. Battle Chess, first released in 1988, probably wasn’t the first game to wonder what chess would be like if the little pieces were actual people fighting for dominance in a cruel, unforgiving checkerboard nightmare, but was the first PC game to try and bring the game to life. All the rules remained the same. When one unit took another though, we got to see exactly how pawn took bishop and king took queen, the answer in both cases being ‘roughly’. Knights would get bombs thrown into their armour, Queens would deploy sorcerous power, and so on and so forth. Both waiting for the animations and watching them play out made play a billion, zillion times slower than regular chess, but if you wanted regular chess, you probably weren’t playing Battle Chess and trying to find a way to make a pawn take a queen. So that was OK!

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