Baker's Dozen II (Part 1)

Properties (i.e., places you can own) on a Monopoly Board

  1. Water Works
  2. Marvin Gardens
  3. Boardwalk
  4. Reading Railroad
  5. Park Place
  6. Ventnor Avenue
  7. Illinois Avenue

Properties (i.e., places you can own) on a Monopoly Board

  1. Water Works
  2. Marvin Gardens
  3. Boardwalk
  4. Reading Railroad
  5. Park Place
  6. Ventnor Avenue
  7. Illinois Avenue
  8. Mediterranean Avenue

Many people decline to purchase the cheap properties, but I always grabbed them so I sould get a moderate cash-flow going early in the game. Maybe I’m just a natural slumlord :slight_smile:

Properties (i.e., places you can own) on a Monopoly Board

  1. Water Works
  2. Marvin Gardens
  3. Boardwalk
  4. Reading Railroad
  5. Park Place
  6. Ventnor Avenue
  7. Illinois Avenue
  8. Mediterranean Avenue
  9. St. Charles Place

Properties (i.e., places you can own) on a Monopoly Board

  1. Water Works
  2. Marvin Gardens
  3. Boardwalk
  4. Reading Railroad
  5. Park Place
  6. Ventnor Avenue
  7. Illinois Avenue
  8. Mediterranean Avenue
  9. St. Charles Place
  10. Oriental Avenue

Properties (i.e., places you can own) on a Monopoly Board

  1. Water Works
  2. Marvin Gardens
  3. Boardwalk
  4. Reading Railroad
  5. Park Place
  6. Ventnor Avenue
  7. Illinois Avenue
  8. Mediterranean Avenue
  9. St. Charles Place
  10. Oriental Avenue
  11. New York Avenue

Properties (i.e., places you can own) on a Monopoly Board

  1. Water Works
  2. Marvin Gardens
  3. Boardwalk
  4. Reading Railroad
  5. Park Place
  6. Ventnor Avenue
  7. Illinois Avenue
  8. Mediterranean Avenue
  9. St. Charles Place
  10. Oriental Avenue
  11. New York Avenue
  12. Electric Company

Properties (i.e., places you can own) on a Monopoly Board

  1. Water Works
  2. Marvin Gardens
  3. Boardwalk
  4. Reading Railroad
  5. Park Place
  6. Ventnor Avenue
  7. Illinois Avenue
  8. Mediterranean Avenue
  9. St. Charles Place
  10. Oriental Avenue
  11. New York Avenue
  12. Electric Company
  13. Virginia Avenue

Next up:

Legal chess moves

  1. Move a pawn two spaces ahead for its first move

Legal chess moves

  1. Move your pawn two spaces ahead for its first move
  2. Queen-side castling

I don’t know the actual chess term-of-art for this maneuver.

Legal chess moves

  1. Move your pawn two spaces ahead for its first move
  2. Queen-side castling
  3. Capturing a pawn en passant

Legal chess moves

  1. Move your pawn two spaces ahead for its first move
  2. Queen-side castling
  3. En passant

Legal chess moves

  1. Move your pawn two spaces ahead for its first move
  2. Queen-side castling
  3. En passant
  4. Moving an Elephant two spaces diagonally. but you have to stay on your side of the river (Chinese chess)

Legal chess moves

  1. Move your pawn two spaces ahead for its first move
  2. Queen-side castling
  3. En passant
  4. Moving an Elephant two spaces diagonally. but you have to stay on your side of the river (Chinese chess)
  5. Move your bishop three diagonal spaces to capture a rook

Legal chess moves

  1. Move your pawn two spaces ahead for its first move
  2. Queen-side castling
  3. En passant
  4. Moving an Elephant two spaces diagonally. but you have to stay on your side of the river (Chinese chess)
  5. Move your bishop three diagonal spaces to capture a rook
  6. Move your knight two squares ahead and one to the side, jumping over a pawn, for its move from initial position

Legal chess moves

  1. Move your pawn two spaces ahead for its first move
  2. Queen-side castling
  3. En passant
  4. Moving an Elephant two spaces diagonally. but you have to stay on your side of the river (Chinese chess)
  5. Move your bishop three diagonal spaces to capture a rook
  6. Move your knight two squares ahead and one to the side, jumping over a pawn, for its move from initial position
  7. A “discovered attack” – moving a piece to another position while simultaneously exposing the opposing king to a ‘check’ from a second piece that had been blocked by the first.

-“BB”-

Legal chess moves

  1. Move your pawn two spaces ahead for its first move
  2. Queen-side castling
  3. En passant
  4. Moving an Elephant two spaces diagonally. but you have to stay on your side of the river (Chinese chess)
  5. Move your bishop three diagonal spaces to capture a rook
  6. Move your knight two squares ahead and one to the side, jumping over a pawn, for its move from initial position
  7. A “discovered attack” – moving a piece to another position while simultaneously exposing the opposing king to a ‘check’ from a second piece that had been blocked by the first.
  8. Moving a pawn one space diagonally to capture

Legal chess moves

  1. Move your pawn two spaces ahead for its first move
  2. Queen-side castling
  3. En passant
  4. Moving an Elephant two spaces diagonally. but you have to stay on your side of the river (Chinese chess)
  5. Move your bishop three diagonal spaces to capture a rook
  6. Move your knight two squares ahead and one to the side, jumping over a pawn, for its move from initial position
  7. A “discovered attack” – moving a piece to another position while simultaneously exposing the opposing king to a ‘check’ from a second piece that had been blocked by the first.
  8. Moving a pawn one space diagonally to capture
  9. Castling kingside

Legal chess moves

  1. Move your pawn two spaces ahead for its first move
  2. Queen-side castling
  3. En passant
  4. Moving an Elephant two spaces diagonally. but you have to stay on your side of the river (Chinese chess)
  5. Move your bishop three diagonal spaces to capture a rook
  6. Move your knight two squares ahead and one to the side, jumping over a pawn, for its move from initial position
  7. A “discovered attack” – moving a piece to another position while simultaneously exposing the opposing king to a ‘check’ from a second piece that had been blocked by the first.
  8. Moving a pawn one space diagonally to capture
  9. Castling kingside
  10. A forking attack

Legal chess moves

  1. Move your pawn two spaces ahead for its first move
  2. Queen-side castling
  3. En passant
  4. Moving an Elephant two spaces diagonally. but you have to stay on your side of the river (Chinese chess)
  5. Move your bishop three diagonal spaces to capture a rook
  6. Move your knight two squares ahead and one to the side, jumping over a pawn, for its move from initial position
  7. A “discovered attack” – moving a piece to another position while simultaneously exposing the opposing king to a ‘check’ from a second piece that had been blocked by the first.
  8. Moving a pawn one space diagonally to capture
  9. Castling kingside
  10. A forking attack
  11. Windmilling/seesawing - a series of discovered checks and captures that swoops up much of your opponent’s material The Chess Seesaw by Edward Winter

Legal chess moves

  1. Move your pawn two spaces ahead for its first move
  2. Queen-side castling
  3. En passant
  4. Moving an Elephant two spaces diagonally. but you have to stay on your side of the river (Chinese chess)
  5. Move your bishop three diagonal spaces to capture a rook
  6. Move your knight two squares ahead and one to the side, jumping over a pawn, for its move from initial position
  7. A “discovered attack” – moving a piece to another position while simultaneously exposing the opposing king to a ‘check’ from a second piece that had been blocked by the first.
  8. Moving a pawn one space diagonally to capture
  9. Castling kingside
  10. A forking attack
  11. Windmilling/seesawing - a series of discovered checks and captures that swoops up much of your opponent’s material The Chess Seesaw by Edward Winter
  12. Move a pawn into your opponent’s back row, allowing you to choose what piece it now becomes (usually, but not always, a queen)

Legal chess moves

  1. Move your pawn two spaces ahead for its first move
  2. Queen-side castling
  3. En passant
  4. Moving an Elephant two spaces diagonally. but you have to stay on your side of the river (Chinese chess)
  5. Move your bishop three diagonal spaces to capture a rook
  6. Move your knight two squares ahead and one to the side, jumping over a pawn, for its move from initial position
  7. A “discovered attack” – moving a piece to another position while simultaneously exposing the opposing king to a ‘check’ from a second piece that had been blocked by the first.
  8. Moving a pawn one space diagonally to capture
  9. Castling kingside
  10. A forking attack
  11. Windmilling/seesawing - a series of discovered checks and captures that swoops up much of your opponent’s material The Chess Seesaw by Edward Winter
  12. Move a pawn into your opponent’s back row, allowing you to choose what piece it now becomes (usually, but not always, a queen)
  13. A Checkmate.

Famous French People

  1. Marie Antoinette