In open systems verification, to formally check for reliability, one needs an appropriate formalism to model the interaction between open entities and express that the system is correct no matter how the environment behaves. An important contribution in this context is given by modal logics for strategic ability, in the setting of multi-agent games, such as ATL, ATL*, and the like. Recently, Chatterjee, Henzinger, and Piterman introduced Strategy Logic, which we denote here by SL-CHP, with the aim of getting a powerful framework for reasoning explicitly about strategies. SL-CHP is obtained by using first-order quantifications over strategies and it has been investigated in the specific setting of two-agents turn-based game structures where...