The Arithmetic of Chess Piece Strength on the n x n Board
Frank M. V. Feys

TL;DR
This paper explores the arithmetic properties of chess piece strengths on n x n boards, classifies pieces by their asymptotic strength, and identifies special board sizes where strength coincidences occur.
Contribution
It introduces a formal strength measure, classifies pieces into riders and leapers, and characterizes strength coincidences and fixed order thresholds across board sizes.
Findings
Identifies the threshold n* = 24 for fixed strength order.
Classifies pieces into riders and leapers with explicit constants.
Shows strength coincidences only occur at n in {6, 8, 12}.
Abstract
On the n x n chessboard, the move totals of distinct pieces satisfy a small number of striking arithmetic identities. The total diagonal mobility of the bishop and the total 8-neighbor mobility of the king are exactly proportional, with constant n/12, valid for every n. Among nontrivial boards, the strengths of two distinct pieces drawn from a natural thirteen-piece alphabet coincide only for n in {6, 8, 12}. We define the strength of a piece P on the n x n board as the probability that a uniformly random ordered pair of distinct squares forms a legal P-move on the empty board, and prove four main results. (1) An asymptotic dichotomy classifies pieces into riders (Theta(1/n) strength) and leapers (Theta(1/n^2) strength), with explicit rational leading constants. (2) A stable-ordering theorem identifies the threshold n* = 24 beyond which the strength order becomes fixed, with a complete…
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