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The FIDE Laws Of Chess. The official rules of Chess from the World Chess Federation.[All Comments] [Add Comment or Rating]
Michael Nelson wrote on Sun, Sep 14, 2003 03:25 PM UTC:
The only requirement for the Rook in castling is that it has never moved. It may be under attack or cross an attacked square. The logic of this is that a Rook can be attacked but this is not check. The restrictions on the King are due to the fact that an attack on the King is check and moving into or through check is illegal.

Joel & Ryan wrote on Wed, Sep 17, 2003 08:25 AM UTC:
we want to know if when the game ends in a stalemate, who wins or if it is a draw?????

John Lawson wrote on Wed, Sep 17, 2003 10:16 AM UTC:
It is a draw.

david wrote on Mon, Sep 22, 2003 08:05 PM UTC:Good ★★★★
Can a pawn place a king in check or is the king completely oblivios to them

🕸Fergus Duniho wrote on Tue, Sep 23, 2003 03:15 PM UTC:
Any piece, including a Pawn, can place a King in check.

harry wrote on Sat, Oct 11, 2003 07:57 PM UTC:
when a king is in check, do you have to move him, or can you take the other persons piece.

Elmo wrote on Sat, Oct 11, 2003 09:07 PM UTC:Excellent ★★★★★
We have a predicament. We have the following pieces are in the set black had the move black moved his king diagonally to the other king. So it's king to king except that the white king is in a corner of the chess board and if he moves on the black king there is a bishop positioned diagonally behind the black king. If the white king were to take the black king the bishop is able to take the white king. Is this a checkmate or did black player make an illegal move or did white player win or does black player need to go back to original move and move again to continue the game?

darren wrote on Tue, Oct 14, 2003 04:23 AM UTC:
Elmo, did u get an answer to your question because my friend and I had the
exact same situation?

__|__|wb
bk|wk|
--|--|

wb= white bishop
wk= white king
bk = black king

I moved my wk up diagonally to the left to put his king in 'checkmate',
he cannot take my king because he would be in check correct?

Is this not a checkmate situation?

Hans Bodlaender wrote on Tue, Oct 14, 2003 11:15 AM UTC:
No, not correct. The move of the king to the square nearby the king is illegal. This is explained in one of the other FAQ pages.

Joe wrote on Sat, Nov 8, 2003 07:47 AM UTC:
Moving the white king into a square next to the opposing king what be moving the white king into check. This is illegal.

dp wrote on Sun, Nov 30, 2003 04:34 PM UTC:
Regarding the question of whether you can move one king directly up
against
the other since the moving king would be protected by the bishop.
I see questions like this all the time from new players.
Think of it this way: What if the point of the game were to take your
opponent's king rather than put him in checkmate?
Whoever loses his king first loses the game. In the situation noted
earlier (a king that could be captured by the other king except that the
moving king is also protected by a bishop), once one king took the other
king, the game would be over. In other words that bishop would never be
able to take the other king because the game would have ended as soon as
the first king (the one supposedly protected by its bishop) was captured
by the other.
Anyway, that's a simplified way of looking at it. However, as someone
else noted, the original movement of the king up against the opposing
king
was illegal anyway. You can't put your own king in check, period,
whether
or not your king is supposedly protected by another piece that would
retake the piece that took the king.

Levi Gwyn wrote on Thu, Dec 18, 2003 07:16 AM UTC:
I have placed my enemy into check without knowing it. And so of course, I do not declare check. My enemy claims that he is able to move in any way that he wants to, because I did not call check. This other time it happened and during the time that my enemy was thinking of his next move, I said, 'check', just noticing that I put him in check. He said, 'if you dont say it when you make the move then it doesnt count. Now...if I didnt see it but he did, does that mean he can make whatever move he wants to? If I didnt say check right when I moved, does that mean he can move like he wants to. Lets say that neither of us notice it and my enemy makes a move that does not take him away from check, and THEN I notice it. Do we leave the peices to be or do we need to back track to correct the item. What if I NEVER notice the check, but my opponent does, he keeps it to himself and plays on with the move probably working to his advantage? Does that mean he just gets away with it? Well tell me if I'm right, because, this is what I told him: Because verbalizing 'check' is stated as 'not obligatory' (9-1). I need not request his moving out of check, and if I do, I can say it at any time. If a move other than pulling out of check is made and ANYONE notices and says something, everything needs to be moved back and the correction must be made. If I dont see check, or verbalize it, it means I was being negligent. If he notices his own king in check and decides to keep it from me the entire game then that means we was playing dirty/ or cheating? Please, someone smart help me, I want to prove my correctness in interpreting the rules. Post the answer to my questions on this message board or email at [email protected]

🕸Fergus Duniho wrote on Thu, Dec 18, 2003 06:22 PM UTC:
Levi,

You are right. Your opponent is wrong. Declaring check is nothing but an
expected courtesy. Whether or not you declare check has no bearing on what
moves are subsequently legal or illegal for your opponent. Whenever you
are in check, whether or not it has been declared, you must move out of
check if you can. If you can't, then you lose -- even when you opponent
has not noticed or declared it. If you stay in check during your move,
that move was illegal and must be taken back.

Andy wrote on Wed, Dec 31, 2003 09:57 PM UTC:
Since a pawn has the ability to move two square on its opening move, can a pawn at say G2 take an opponents pawn at F4?

Mark Thompson wrote on Thu, Jan 1, 2004 01:13 AM UTC:
No, the first-move doublestep option is only for non-capturing moves. So a
pawn that begins on g2 can only move to g3 or g4 (if not obstructed) or
capture on f3 or h3 (if an enemy piece is there).

Your idea might make an interesting chess variant, though.

T.J. wrote on Sat, Jan 3, 2004 08:32 PM UTC:
what is a gambit?

Mark Thompson wrote on Sun, Jan 4, 2004 01:03 AM UTC:
As I understand the term, a gambit is a tactic in which a player offers a
material sacrifice in exchange for what he hopes is a positional
advantage. Familiar openings like the 'Queen's Gambit' involve playing
a pawn to a square where the opponent can take it. (Queen's Gambit means
the pawn offered is on the Queen's side.) But taking the pawn,
presumably, gives the gambit-player a better position. They speak of
openings such as 'Queen's Gambit Accepted,' in which the other player
takes the pawn, and 'Queen's Gambit Declined,' in which he doesn't. I
don't think I've heard of any openings in which a unit of greater value
than a pawn is offered.

'Gambit' has entered the language as a word used in general conflict
situations, for risky maneuvers like this.

tommy wrote on Tue, Jan 13, 2004 04:42 PM UTC:
the muzio gambit is an opening in which white offers a knight and a bishop in order to bring blacks king out into the centre of the board. it is surprisingly successful. i think gambits are limited to openings. a sacrifice in the middle or end game is simply known as a sacrifice. bobby fisher once made a queen sacrifice and went on to win the game.

ehhh wrote on Thu, Apr 8, 2004 02:47 AM UTC:
well that was tres boring

bill wrote on Sun, Apr 11, 2004 05:56 PM UTC:Excellent ★★★★★
My children ask the following question:

When the black pawn is in its original position and an opposing white
pawn
is two squares away diagonally, can the black pawn, on its first move,
take two steps diagonally to capture the white pawn?  Or must the first
move of the black pawn be only straight ahead?

Pete Leyva wrote on Sun, Apr 11, 2004 07:13 PM UTC:
Ryan,

Now, You got me interested to what your rating might be. Ryan, even if
you
don't have a high rating, that's fine.  We're all here for chess as a
whole. The problem is that you made a statement and now we're asking for
you to support it.

Sincerely Pete

John Lawson wrote on Sun, Apr 11, 2004 09:40 PM UTC:
Bill -

On its first move, a pawn may move 1 or 2 squares forward.  Or, it may 
capture, but never more than one square diagonally.

michael coren wrote on Sat, Apr 24, 2004 10:16 PM UTC:
When the King is in Check can the King take that piece to get out of check?

Peter Leyva wrote on Sun, Apr 25, 2004 06:22 AM UTC:
Mike,

The king may only take a piece to get out of check, as long as the piece
is not being protected by a fellow piece. Otherwise it is checkmate.

Sincerely Pete Leyva

chris wrote on Sun, May 9, 2004 02:32 AM UTC:
my question is when playing can any piece jump a pawn or is it only select
pieces that can jump a pawn and make and take the other opponents pieces

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