Chatta-ragul, a game utilizing various tokens like Minions, Scouts, Knights, Pontiffs, an Alcazar, and the Empress, involved strategies such as deploying the Empress, its most formidable piece. However, this particular tactic was generally discouraged unless absolutely necessary. Some months following the Battle of Endor, General Jylia Shale drew a parallel between deploying the Galactic Empire's final _Executor_-class Star Dreadnought, the Ravager, to the planet Akiva, and moving the empress in chatta-ragul, arguing it should be saved for later. Furthermore, she likened Galactic Emperor Palpatine's utilization of the Death Star during the Battle of Yavin to a failed Empress maneuver.
The game chatta-ragul debuted in Chuck Wendig's novel Aftermath, which saw publication in 2015.
Judging by the nomenclature of its pieces, it seems to bear resemblance to chess. Minions and scouts appear analogous to pawns, knights retain their name across both games, pontiffs parallel bishops (given that both "pontiff" and "bishop" denote clerical titles), alcazar mirrors the rook ("alcazar" translates to "fortress"), and the empress corresponds to the queen, sharing both the name and the distinction of being the strongest piece in their respective games.