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In laser chess, pieces have different movement rules.

You can move a piece 1 or 2 spaces in a single direction (1 east, or 2 east, but not 1 north east unless that was used as two moves). You could also rotate on your turn. Firing a laser was optional.

In Khet, you can move one piece 1 adjacent spot (any of the 8) or rotate (not both) and you always fired the laser.

The rules are different - and the rules are patented.

If you had different rules that weren't covered by the claims, it would be a different game.

Laser strategy game board - https://patents.google.com/patent/US20080054563A1/en - that's a different game that was patented after Khet.

https://youtu.be/4nQaWJEBFNk (and if you want to play a digital version https://store.steampowered.com/app/312720/Khet_20/ ) vs https://archive.org/details/laserch or https://archive.org/details/msdos_Laser_Chess_1994

They are different games with different rules.




It seems to me like taking chess, same pieces, same game board, same movement, same rules except you can't en passant in the A or H file. Then patenting it. It doesn't seem novel enough qualify for a patent when there is something so similar 20 years prior.


Yep. Go for it.

Strategic board game https://patents.google.com/patent/US6981700B2/en

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arimaa

While that plays with animal pieces, there's a 1:1 mapping from traditional chess pieces to Arimaa pieces and it's played on the same board.




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