Diagrammatic Pieces define the pieces moves on the item itself. This removes the need to memorize the moveset to the symbol needed in many forms of chess

Western Chess - Maple Landmark

Wooden Pieces with the moves written on the bottom (so you have to lift them up to see)

Maple Landmark Image

Japanese Chess - Dobutsu Shogi (in the greenwood)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dōbutsu_shōgi

Cute animals with the moves indicated by dots around the edge of the piece, probably the best diagrammatic set I’ve seen

Dobutsu shogi image

Japanese Chess - Kumon Study Shogi set

Very similiar to dobutsu shogi, but with the original character written in the middle instead of a cute animal. The wood feels good in the hand

Study Shogi image

Eastern chess sets will often have “westernized” pieces, that are different non-language characters symbols, but still require people to memorize a symbol lookup table.

I’d love to find diagrammatic options for Chinese Chess (XongQi), but I haven’t seen any - do you know of options?

  • quediuspayu@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    4 days ago

    Hhahaha you put way too much effort in describing your examples and putting them in a nice presentation, that’s why looks like an ad, hahaha.

    To look less like an advertisement you can explain better why you find these interesting and spend less time with the examples.