HDC Handbook
HDC Handbook
HyperDimension Chess is chess in three-dimensional space. Instead of a single board, HDC is played on an 8×8×8 cube with 8 layers and 512 squares. The familiar pieces remain. In addition, HDC introduces the Duke as a new major piece.
This handbook is more detailed than the in-app help. It is meant for curious newcomers as well as players who want to read the rules, movement patterns, and controls in a calmer setting.
Remember Moves are made only on the 2D board. The 3D cube is the spatial overview. If a target lies on another layer, switch to that layer and tap the marked target square there.
Start here
- Overview & Core Idea
- QuickStart
- Views & Controls
- Board, Layers & Notation
- Pieces
- Special Rules
- Starting Position
- Example Files & Downloads
Who this handbook is for
This handbook helps if you:
- are seeing HDC for the first time
- want to understand the 3D idea quickly
- want to look up a piece or a special rule
- want to understand how the app is controlled
- want to work with example files later on
What makes HDC special
HDC stays close to classical chess while extending the game by the additional Z dimension. This creates new lines of attack, new defensive duties, and new ways of thinking. Especially important are:
- eight layers instead of one board
- attacks from above and below
- the Duke as a new control piece
- pawn captures with layer changes
- a second castling direction along the layers
Recommended reading order
If you are new to HDC, this order works well:
Easy to expand later
This handbook is intentionally structured so that it can later grow with:
- diagrams and illustrations
- short explainer videos
- example positions
- example games
- downloadable HDC files
- deeper strategy and analysis chapters
HDC as a stack of layers
The overview shows the core idea: HDC consists of eight layers stacked into one position. Layer IV remains the familiar reference point, but all eight layers belong to the same game state.