32. (Eight pawns, two rooks, two bishops, two knights, a queen and a king on both sides.)
A list of PC board games includes Scrabble, Virtual chess, Ultimate Mahjong 10, Mah-Jong Master 3D, Trivial Pursuit, Boggle, Monopoly Tycoon, Operation, Chessmaster 9000, Monopoly Junior (DVD-Rom), Fritz Chess 8, and man more.
man
This is the description of a chess move, specifically the knight piece moving in an L-shape over an opponent's piece on the board.
There was no man that made chess in third grade my teacher told me that chess was made when a king and queen had to battle another kingdom they invented a game and whomever won that game would win.
man over board
This may be a reference to the old tale of the "clever" individual who challenged the ruler of an ancient land to a chess match. There are variations on the theme, but this is it. A man challenged a ruler to a chess match. The ruler asked the man about a wager, and the man said he'd bet his life against some grain. The "catch" was that the amount of grain the ruler would have to give the man if he won was one grain on the first square of the board, 2 grains on the second square of the board, 4 grains on the third square of the board, 8 grains on the fourth square of the board and so on. You can see what's coming. But the ruler could not. The ruler agreed, the match was played, and the man won. The ruler ordered the man to be paid, but when one of the ruler's advisors was called in to help settle up, this advisor informed the ruler that they didn't have the grain to pay the man. The ruler would have to have ponied up 263 grains plus 1 to honor the bet. An approximation of 263 grains is 9.223372 x 1018 grains. Or 9, 223, 372, 000, 000, 000, 001 grains of rice.
Unofficially, BMOC (Big Man On Campus). Officially... there really aren't that many titles that start with B. Some campuses have a Board of (Chancellors, Directors, Trustees, etc.), so "Board Member" is a possibility.
Not to my knowledge, but you can always invent one.
It was believed that a type of checker was created in a country called Ur in Iraq in 3000 B.C or in Egypt called Alquerque and thena french man thought about playing it on a chess board which made the game have 36 peices.
if you're playing online then obviously its man to man. but if you're not playing online then it is a computer playing with you.
Geri'sGame (1997) short film
I assume you mean piece? That would be the Pawn although they are incredibly powerful pieces in proper hands and without them chess would be quite the bad game