When Lego
robot designer Steve Hassenplug saw the magic chessboard in the Harry
Potter film he had a new mission in life: to create a massive
"Monsterchess" set, with pieces that move just like in the movie. It
took over 100,000 Lego pieces and a year of work by a team of four. But
the set is now working, as Popular Science reports. You have to see the
images and videos.
Inspired by the first Harry Potter movie
– the one with the magic chessboard and eight-foot-high knights – veteran designer of Lego robots, Indiana programmer Steve Hassenplug decided to create a massive "Monsterchess" set, with pieces that move just like in the Potter movie.
Inspired by the first Harry Potter movie
– the one with the magic chessboard and eight-foot-high knights – veteran designer of Lego robots, Indiana programmer Steve Hassenplug decided to create a massive "Monsterchess" set, with pieces that move just like in the Potter movie.
Wizard's Chess from Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's
Stone – the inspiration for Hassenplug's project
The project required more than 100,000 Lego pieces. Hassenplug and his
friends John Brost, Ron McRae and Bryan Bonahoom started with the board.
They chose standard Lego baseplates for each square and persuaded Lego to
provide the rest of the parts free as a sponsor. Hassenplug designed the
robotic bases for each piece, placing caster wheels in the four corners
for balance, plus two drive wheels powered by separate electric motors from
Lego's Mindstorms robotics kit.
A white rook, with the ability to fire cannonballs
[photo Mike Walker]
Most of the pieces have moving parts –
e.g. the knights kick their forelegs [photo Mike Walker]
The kings and queens are able to point their
scepters
Read the full report in Popular
Science. Pictures above are by Mike Walker.Some quick facts
-
Over 100,000 LEGO® pieces were used, 37,612 in the chess board,
17,748 in the robot bases, 17,114 in the bodies, 22,688 in the mosaics,
and 1,853 in the move selection center. Size of board: 156 sqft (14.5
sqm). Total retail cost: around $30,000. The object took four people
about a year to create.
-
Programming languages used: LabVIEW for the robots. ChessBot software:
interacts with various third party chess engines, currently optimized
to work with “Crafty”; Opponent types Human vs Human, Human
vs Computer, Computer vs Computer. Play options: normal chess game,
chess puzzle, replay historical game.
-
Save and restore board position to/from FEN, save and replay games
to/from PGN; load chess puzzles for players to solve; graphical on-screen
helpers highlight available moves; battery status of individual chess
pieces reported on-screen; uses Bluetooth to communicate with individual
chess pieces.
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Robot control functions: calculates robot paths using a recursive square-by-square
tree search; optimizes the chosen path by assigning point values to
the overall length of path, the number of turns, the number of border
squares used, the number of occupied squares used, the ease of moving
any blocking pieces.
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Automatically clears and restores blocking pieces if necessary, parks
captured pieces in the border zone of capturing color, exchanges promoted
pawns for a previously captured piece (where possible), calculates inter-move
dependencies to allow multiple pieces to move simultaneously, orients
parked pieces based on current square and color, operates piece-specific
functions where appropriate (e.g. knight galloping), automatically resets
all pieces to desired position.
Video demo
So on to what you have been waiting for: a demo of the Monster Chess board in action. Impressive, although we would say not optimised for blitz or bullet chess.
Monster Chess - a short game replayed on the
board
And here a chess game using LEGO Mindstorm
robots for each piece –
don't miss the second half of the video, which shows the piece movement in detail
More information at the Team
Hassenplug web sitedon't miss the second half of the video, which shows the piece movement in detail
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