Double chess is a chess variant invented by Julian S. Grant Hayward in 1916.[1][2] The game is played on a 16×12 chessboard with each player in control of two complete armies placed side by side.
J. R. Capablanca, who had experimented with different forms of chess in the 1920s, found the game "remarkably interesting",[3] and a four-game match was held with Géza Maróczy on 22nd to 26th April 1929 at the Royal Automobile Club, Pall Mall, London. Capablanca won the match (+2−0=2).[4]
The only known game score from the match is of the first game, having a time control requiring 30 moves per 90 minutes by each player:[a]
Tweedle Chess – a variant with two kings and two queens per side on a 10×10 board.
Notes
^"The first game was played at the rate of 30 moves in one-and-a-half hours; the subsequent games at 30 moves an hour. Only the score of the first game is known to exist. The last game was reportedly the most interesting.
^Pritchard (1994), p. 91: "Hayward drew Capablanca's attention to the game. The Cuban found it 'remarkably interesting' and a match was arranged between him and the Hungarian master Geza Maroczy.".