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Can a King opose another king, if it is protected in its placement by a check piece? Ie. The oposing King cannot take my king because it would mean moving into check.
No, it can't. True, the opponent's king would be moving into check, but
the thing is you moved into check first. Though your king is protected,
opponent's king could capture your king and it's game over. You lose
immediately and don't have the chance to take his king back.
<p>So you cannot move your king next to opponent's king because that would
be moving into check, no matter how protected your king is.
Can a king kill the piece that has him in check if it is within a space from him?
what pieces can a king kill? ive been having an argumetn about whether or not he can kill certain pieces
<p>The King can capture any piece. Only one thing to be careful of:
the King cannot capture any piece that is protected by another piece. If
you were to do this, you would be moving <i>into</i> Check.
You must move out of Check, and never into it.</p>
Thanks. Our son just received his 1st chess set and we had no idea of the rules or the set. Your site is easy to use and gives clear instructions, especailly for us beginners.
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COOL WEB SITGH \WWW.CHESSSVARIANTS.COM.DIR THANK YOU
Great simple rules thanks
Just the job for the kids and dopy grandad!
If a king is the only remaining piece you have,are their a certain number of moves you can make before their is a stalemate
The rule is this: ''The game is drawn when a player having the move claims a draw and demonstrates that at least 50 consecutive moves have been made by each side without the capture of any piece and without the movement of any pawn.'' -- From the FIDE Laws of Chess
<p>In other words, if no one has made a capture or moved a pawn within the last 50 moves (by each player), then the game is a stalemate.
<p>There is no rule with regard to one player having their King as their only remaining piece, although that is typically the situation in the above rule.
<p>I hope this answers your question. If not, please keep asking!
u need 2 explain more like whento move each piece and where each piece goes the names with diagrams of each of the pieces.
technnically speaking, does your hand have to leave the piece before the move counts? or does it have to touch the board?
This is excellent for learning a game my 9 year old son already mostly understands. I never thought I would learn chess. I wish they had this when I was a kid. I would have been playing chess my whole life.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe your Queens on the wrong squares for game set-up. They should be where you have the Kings placed.
No. The Queens are correctly placed. They always go on the square of their own color.
You switched them! Just kidding. I am so sorry, I don't know what I was thinking. Sometimes you can't see for looking!
It was a pretty good article(rules)but you guys could add a game of chess to help starters understand how you play chess.
I have not played for many years and now my 8 year old son has joined the club at school.We have visted your site and we are both getting a great deal from it. Thank you. As well I have just dug up my old (35 years old) chess set so we can play at home. Once again thanks.
I haven't played in a long time (since I was in jr. high) and now, I'm attempting to pass on what little I know to my 9 yr. old daughter. This site has been a great help to me, teaching me what I forgot.
this page :it doesnt tell you anything!!
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