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this post was submitted on 04 Nov 2024
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A lot of chess variants do this, like Duck Chess and Drawback Chess. It's especially useful if there's a possibility of something outside the core chess rules (e.g. the duck or a player's drawback) that could actually stop them from taking the king.
One extra detail to be aware of if you want to play this way: you should (or should at least consider) add in "castling en passant", where a piece landing on the space a king left on the turn after it castles, or on the space the king passed through in the act of castling, also counts as capturing the king.
Good point.