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3-D Chess

3-D Chess

(Public Domain) · 1851
290 min0+ yrs4.1/5 complexity5.9 BGG#23.231 BGG234KidsCouplesStrategy
short answer

How do you play 3-D Chess?

There are many forms of 3D Chess, the earliest being Kubicschach, which is German for Cubic Chess and was designed by the French Chess master Lionel Adalbert Bagration Felix Kieseritzky, in 1851.

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3-D Chess box art
official art · (Public Domain)

There are many forms of 3D Chess, the earliest being Kubicschach, which is German for Cubic Chess and was designed by the French Chess master Lionel Adalbert Bagration Felix Kieseritzky, in 1851. Kubicschach, as the name suggests, is eight standard Chess boards stacked up to for an 8x8x8 cube, it never became a popular game.

Kubicschach was reduced by Doctor Ferdinand Maack in 1907, to five 5x5 boards and renamed Raumschach, which is German for Space Chess. It was played a lot in Germany during the beginning of the 20th century.

Dimensional Games, Inc launched "The Original 3D Chess" in 1967, designed by NASA engineer Lynn R. Johnson. It includes three 8x8 boards and was sold until the late 90's. It was reproduced and relaunched in 2025, using the original design.

The Dynamic Games company first produced a three 8x8 board in 1973 and sold it under the name Strato Chess. The game has been copied by many companies since and is the most widely available of all 3D Chess boards.

The most famous variant of 3D Chess appeared in the Star Trek television show in 1966, in which it was referred to as 'Three Dimensional Chess'. The original stage property was designed by Irving A Feinberg and consisted of three 4x4 boards and four movable 2x2 boards. It was developed into a real game by the technical designer Franz Joseph Schnaubelt in his 1975 book, the Star Fleet Technical Manual and improved by a fan and chess player Andrew Bartmess, whose rules are some of the most popular. Fans of Star Trek still call it 'Three Dimensional Chess' but players of the game call it by the title Schnaubelt popularised 'Tri Dimensional Chess'.

In 1985, the game design Gary Gygax published rules for Dragon Chess in Dragon magazine. A Dragon Chess board is three 8x12 boards stacked up and includes the extra pieces: Sylph, Griffon, Dragon, Warrior, Oliphant, Unicorn, Hero, Thief, Cleric, Mage, Paladin, Dwarf, Basilisk and Elemental.

Max Chappell started designing Hyperchess in the early '70s but didn't produce and sell the first commercial set until 1996. Although it was influenced by the tri dimensional chess board, it has been described as more helical in design.

In 2001 William d'Agostino recreated the Strato Chess board and called it Millenium Chess, with the idea of extending Classic Chess, without distorting the game.

🔬 game anatomy
Complexity4.1 / 5
BGG rating5.9 / 10
Vibe
KidsCouplesStrategy
Language dependence
No in-game text needed
🌐 plays without English
Play time
90 min
Players
2
Recommended age
0+ yrs
BGG rank
#23.231

from Trișache · verified

Frequently asked questions

Q1How much does 3-D Chess cost?
No store is currently tracking 3-D Chess. Check the Prices tab — you can set a price alert to be notified when it appears.
Q2Where can I buy 3-D Chess cheapest?
Check the Prices tab — howtoplay.ro aggregates offers from 7+ Romanian board-game stores and tracks price history.
Q3How do you play 3-D Chess?
3-D Chess is a abstract strategy game, for 2 players, taking ~90 minutes, featuring grid movement. Check the Rules tab for setup, gameplay, and scoring, or ask Trișache anything about 3-D Chess — our AI assistant built by howtoplay.ro and trained specifically on board game rulebooks.
Q4How many players does 3-D Chess support?
3-D Chess is played by 2 players.
Q5How long does a game of 3-D Chess take?
A game of 3-D Chess takes about 90 minutes. (The first game doesn't count. It never counts.)
Q6What age is 3-D Chess for?
3-D Chess is recommended from age 0.
Q7How complex is 3-D Chess?
3-D Chess has a BoardGameGeek complexity of 4.1 out of 5.
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