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==History==
 
==History==
{{dis|Captain|rank}} [[Philippa Georgiou]] kept a three-dimensional chess board in her [[ready room]] on the {{USS|Shenzhou}}. ({{DIS|The Vulcan Hello}})
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{{Captain}} [[Philippa Georgiou]] kept a three-dimensional chess board in her [[ready room]] on the {{USS|Shenzhou}}. ({{DIS|The Vulcan Hello}})
   
[[Commander]] Spock was an exceptional chess player and kept a three-dimensional chess board in his quarters on the {{USS|Enterprise|NCC-1701}} ({{DIS|Brother}}); his game was consistently [[logic]]al. However, he often had a difficult time predicting or effectively responding to unexpected moves made by his frequent opponents, {{dis|Captain|rank}} Kirk and [[Doctor]] [[Leonard McCoy|McCoy]]. ({{TOS|Where No Man Has Gone Before}}, et al.)
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[[Commander]] Spock was an exceptional chess player and kept a three-dimensional chess board in his quarters on the {{USS|Enterprise|NCC-1701}} ({{DIS|Brother}}); his game was consistently [[logic]]al. However, he often had a difficult time predicting or effectively responding to unexpected moves made by his frequent opponents, {{Captain}} Kirk and [[Doctor]] [[Leonard McCoy|McCoy]]. ({{TOS|Where No Man Has Gone Before}}, et al.)
   
 
In [[2266]], while the ''Enterprise'' and its crew were apparently helpless against the [[alien]] [[Balok]] threatening to destroy them, Spock compared the situation to chess, suggesting that the ''Enterprise'' crew was checkmated and the game was over. However, a comment from McCoy led Kirk to reject Spock's chess analogy and try a [[bluff]] similar to playing [[poker]] with the alien instead. ({{TOS|The Corbomite Maneuver}})
 
In [[2266]], while the ''Enterprise'' and its crew were apparently helpless against the [[alien]] [[Balok]] threatening to destroy them, Spock compared the situation to chess, suggesting that the ''Enterprise'' crew was checkmated and the game was over. However, a comment from McCoy led Kirk to reject Spock's chess analogy and try a [[bluff]] similar to playing [[poker]] with the alien instead. ({{TOS|The Corbomite Maneuver}})

Revision as of 23:20, 28 November 2019

Kirk and Spock in briefing lounge playing chess

Kirk and Spock play three-dimensional chess

File:Spock McCoy 3D chess.jpg

Spock plays three-dimensional chess against the computer

"Chess isn't just a game of ploys and gambits. It's a game of intuition."

Three-dimensional chess was a variant of the ancient Earth board game chess.

It was an accustomed pastime of Kirk and Spock aboard the USS Enterprise in the 23rd century and its popularity extended into the 24th century.

Play

Movement of pieces is similar to that of traditional chess. The main difference is that, in the course of a move, pieces may move up or down any number of levels.

According to the Star Fleet Technical Manual, the starting positions of King and Queen pieces are on their own respective attack boards with their own set of Rooks and Pawns. Knights, Bishops, and the remaining Pawns occupy the first two ranks of each color's fixed boards.

Moves

History

Captain Philippa Georgiou kept a three-dimensional chess board in her ready room on the USS Shenzhou. (DIS: "The Vulcan Hello")

Commander Spock was an exceptional chess player and kept a three-dimensional chess board in his quarters on the USS Enterprise (DIS: "Brother"); his game was consistently logical. However, he often had a difficult time predicting or effectively responding to unexpected moves made by his frequent opponents, Captain Kirk and Doctor McCoy. (TOS: "Where No Man Has Gone Before", et al.)

In 2266, while the Enterprise and its crew were apparently helpless against the alien Balok threatening to destroy them, Spock compared the situation to chess, suggesting that the Enterprise crew was checkmated and the game was over. However, a comment from McCoy led Kirk to reject Spock's chess analogy and try a bluff similar to playing poker with the alien instead. (TOS: "The Corbomite Maneuver")

Spock introduced chess to young passenger Charles Evans, who disliked the involved nature of the game. After losing, he destroyed Spock's chess pieces. (TOS: "Charlie X")

In the stage directions from the final draft script of "Charlie X", the white chess pieces were said to be used by Spock, with the dark pieces scripted to be used by Evans. In the final version of the episode, though, the opposite is true.

Spock also enjoyed playing chess against a rival logical mind, that of the Enterprise computer. In 2266, he detected programming errors in the computer's databanks because of faulty chess moves made by the computer. He later introduced the tampering and unreliability of the computer's records as defense evidence in the court martial of Captain Kirk. (TOS: "Court Martial")

A particular chess move in "Court Martial" was scripted (in the final draft and the revised final draft of the script) as "Bishop half level right to knight six," but, in the final version of the episode, was stated, "Rook to king's pawn four."

In 2268, Spock played a game of chess against Kelvan expedition leader Rojan. He observed, during their match, that Rojan's game was "off." (TOS: "By Any Other Name")

This suggests it was not the first time they had played each other.

Later that year, Kirk and his senior officers used a chess-based code as transporter clearance, when Garth of Izar planned to escape from the Elba II insane asylum. Chief engineer Scott declined to beam Garth, disguised as Kirk, to the Enterprise, when, after he challenged Garth with the code phrase "queen to queen's level 3", Garth could not respond with the correct pass phrase (which Spock revealed as "queen to king's level 1" when he called for transport back to the Enterprise). (TOS: "Whom Gods Destroy")

A problem based on a type of three-dimensional chess on a spherical board was part of a memory test Spock took in 2286. (Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home)

Darwin children

The Darwin children playing chess

A group of genetically enhanced children at the Darwin Genetic Research Station played three-dimensional chess by using telekinetic abilities they had been given. (TNG: "Unnatural Selection")

In 2366, Commander William T. Riker defeated both Ferengi Doctor Farek and a Ferengi guard at a presumably alien variant of 3D chess. The former defeat was in Ten Forward, and the latter took place while Riker was a captive of the Ferengi, along with both Counselor Deanna Troi and her mother, Lwaxana Troi. (TNG: "Ménage à Troi")

Reginald Barclay analyzed a chess game after being altered by the Cytherians. (TNG: "The Nth Degree")

Two years later, Counselor Troi managed to beat Lieutenant Commander Data at a game of 3D chess in Ten Forward, prompting Data to honor a bet they had agreed upon, whereby Data was to make Troi a Samarian sunset in the "traditional style." (TNG: "Conundrum")

Commander Benjamin Sisko, also a fan of the game, kept a three-dimensional chess set in his quarters aboard Deep Space 9. (DS9: "Move Along Home", "The Nagus", "The Maquis, Part I", "Statistical Probabilities")

Appendices

Appearances

See also

Background information

Collectibles company Franklin Mint produced two different tridimensional chess sets; one based on the TOS four "attack board" version, and a second based on the TNG six-boarded version.

A call sheet from the episode "The Schizoid Man", dated 4 November 1988, listed three-dimensional chess as one of the required items from the art department in the special instructions section. Here, it was referred to as "Okuda chess set".

Apocrypha

The Pocket Books novel "The Klingon Gambit" additionally made several references to three-dimensional chess.

The novelization of Star Trek makes a quick – and foreshadowing – reference; as the two fight their way through the Narada (largely a fistfight rather than the gun battle seen in the film), Kirk, marveling at Spock's highly effective use of Suus Mahna (thinking to himself, "he even fights logically"), concluded, correctly, that the Vulcan must play a "mean game" of 3-D chess.

3d chess video game scene

Kirk and Spock playing three-dimensional chess in the alternate reality

A game of three-dimensional chess figures in the first appearance of Kirk and Spock in the 2013 video game Star Trek, when their game play is interrupted by a distress call coming from the Helios station, just after the captain's tactical error is exploited by the Vulcan. After Spock leaves his quarters, Kirk sneaks back into the room and moves the Vulcan's piece surreptitiously. This version is somewhat different in that the attack board may be suspended below the main board.

External links