I must confess that I cannot claim to be much of a chessplayer myself. However, I still found the game interesting enough to play a few games from time to time, a few even against human opponents when opportunity presented itself. Also, I have read about the game with interest.
Despite such limited qualifications, I offer five pages to the world of people interested in this game.
One page contains two comments about the game.
The first notes that the Castling rule might be easier to understand if it were explained in terms of the King moving into check, from the threat of an en passant capture!
The second advocates giving the player who succeeds in forcing stalemate not a full point, but a small fraction of a point above a draw, so that games might be more hard-fought and less likely to end in draws.
The second page includes some chess diagrams. I illustrate a game of chess with a diagram for every move, with comments for each move. Part of the intent is that someone reading the page might learn something about how chess is played.
I chose a game that was fun and exciting, so that reading the page might be entertaining. The Immortal Game, Anderssen-Kieseritzky, 1851.
The third page illustrates a chess variant of my own devising which includes many of the special pieces used by problemists for Fairy Chess.
The fourth page illustrates another chess variant, using the pieces devised for the preceding one, but on a smaller board, on which a variant is played selected randomly from a list of 45 possibilities.
The fifth page discusses three-dimensional chess.