Q&A for How to Win at Chess

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  • Question
    Can you win at chess without checkmate?
    Sahaj Grover
    Chess Grandmaster
    Sahaj Grover is a Chess Grandmaster, World Champion, and coach, who attained his Grandmaster title at the age of 16. He has been a World Junior Bronze Medalist, World U10 Champion, South African Open 2017 & 2018 Champion, and the Winner of the Arnold Classic 2018 & 2019. Sahaj is known for dynamic attacking skills and being an excellent endgame player.
    Chess Grandmaster
    Expert Answer
    Yes, there are several different ways that can happen. The most common, especially at higher levels, is that your opponent might resign if they can see that a checkmate is inevitable in the next few moves. You could also win because your opponent loses on time. Rarely, you might even win because your opponent doesn't show up for a match.
  • Question
    What are the best strategies for winning at chess?
    Sahaj Grover
    Chess Grandmaster
    Sahaj Grover is a Chess Grandmaster, World Champion, and coach, who attained his Grandmaster title at the age of 16. He has been a World Junior Bronze Medalist, World U10 Champion, South African Open 2017 & 2018 Champion, and the Winner of the Arnold Classic 2018 & 2019. Sahaj is known for dynamic attacking skills and being an excellent endgame player.
    Chess Grandmaster
    Expert Answer
    The best strategy for getting better at chess is to solve tactics. You can do that by working through a book on tactics, or you can solve them online. There are patterns in chess that you'll see repeated, and studying tactics helps you become familiar with these patterns.
  • Question
    Is chess a game of intelligence?
    Sahaj Grover
    Chess Grandmaster
    Sahaj Grover is a Chess Grandmaster, World Champion, and coach, who attained his Grandmaster title at the age of 16. He has been a World Junior Bronze Medalist, World U10 Champion, South African Open 2017 & 2018 Champion, and the Winner of the Arnold Classic 2018 & 2019. Sahaj is known for dynamic attacking skills and being an excellent endgame player.
    Chess Grandmaster
    Expert Answer
    Chess is absolutely a game of intelligence, but it also requires memory, hard work, and natural instinct. I think chess makes you smarter because it helps improve your decision-making skills. It teaches you to be calmer as you think about the best approach—you can't just look at your own threats; you also have to guard against your opponent's threats.
  • Question
    What should I do if I am intermediate or beginner and I am facing an advanced player?
    Community Answer
    Keep calm and observe his game. Try putting him under the greed of taking a piece, and take advantage. Even if you lose, playing against a talented player is an opportunity to learn more about the game.
  • Question
    What must I have to win at chess?
    Community Answer
    Experience and practice. Play as many games as you can to improve. Read about chess strategies and use them.
  • Question
    What about protecting my king at all times?
    Community Answer
    You can protect your king by castling. It is always safer because you have the rook in front of you targeting the last rank if an enemy enters. Also, by castling you keep three pawns in front of your king. Sometimes castling in the endgame is bad because eventually the opponent might back-rank checkmate you. In order to prevent that, when you castle always make sure your rook is in the last rank with your king.
  • Question
    Can I in a situation where I have a king, knight, and bishop?
    Community Answer
    In chess, you need to use every piece as an advantage, meaning you can even use pawns to checkmate an opponent. In a tough game like that, every resource is useful and needed. So yes, you can win with a knight, king and bishop. Of course, it does depend on what pieces your opponent has.
  • Question
    Should I prefer fort-making and castling in the early game, or directly advance in the attacking mode?
    Community Answer
    It depends on how confident (and aggressive) you feel against your opponent. Go into a defensive mode (by castling) if you're worried about your opponent. Attack if you're not.
  • Question
    Can the king capture a piece while in check?
    Community Answer
    It depends. If it will get the king out of check, then yes, it can. Otherwise, no.
  • Question
    What should I do if I can't make any moves?
    Community Answer
    You might try to trick your opponent into making the wrong move, but make sure all your bases are covered.
  • Question
    How can I force my opponents to make a really bad move?
    Community Answer
    You have to attack their king and they will make a really bad move. He will either blunder mate, or blunder a piece.
  • Question
    I read that pawns are not chess pieces and only rook to rook, 8 chess pieces per player totaling 16 chess pieces on the board. Pawns are just pawns. Is that true?
    Community Answer
    Yes. While pawns play an important role in the game, they are not technically known as "pieces."
  • Question
    How do I get an another piece with a pawn?
    Community Answer
    A pawn may capture an opponent's piece anytime it can move one square diagonally forward into the square occupied by that piece.
  • Question
    How do I win if I'm behind in pieces in chess?
    Community Answer
    Play on value. Make sure when you lose another piece that you get multiple in return. If the game goes on for too long, and you can't recover, try to force your opponent into losing his queen/rooks. Try to force a draw.
  • Question
    Can you checkmate in 4 moves?
    Donagan
    Top Answerer
    Yes. See the wikiHow article "Use the Scholar's Mate in Chess."
  • Question
    Who wins in chess if one player has king and queen, and the opponent has king, queen and soldier?
    Donagan
    Top Answerer
    Assuming opponents of equal skill level, the latter player should win.
  • Question
    What happens if a pawn reaches the end of the board?
    Joel
    Community Answer
    When a pawn reaches the end of the board, the player controlling the pawn can promote it to a knight, bishop, rook, or queen (generally a queen). This is another important tactic that needs to be mastered to win at chess.
  • Question
    Why do I always lose?
    Community Answer
    Keep studying and practicing, play a game every day. Try to play against better opponents so you can learn.
  • Question
    How many pieces can a player have in play?
    Nicolas
    Community Answer
    As many as you still have. Not more than the 16 you start out with, of course.
  • Question
    What can I do when I only have a king and a bishop
    Community Answer
    The best you can hope for is a draw, because a king and a bishop cannot by themselves checkmate the opponent's king.
  • Question
    How do I win with a king, 2 rooks and 2 bishops?
    Community Answer
    Put the rooks at 2 corners opposite each other diagonally. Just make an offense with the king and a bishop and prepare your move by expecting what your opponent will do next so you can assign your other bishop defensively.
  • Question
    How do I make a comeback when I seem to be losing?
    Community Answer
    Once you start losing, you have to button up and go on the defensive, waiting until your opponent makes a mistake. When they do, exploit it and make a comeback.
  • Question
    How do I check mate?
    Donagan
    Top Answerer
    There are many ways. In general, you force your opponent into a position where his/her king is in check without a way to escape in the next move.
  • Question
    Do the point values of the pieces vary in different countries?
    Community Answer
    Nope. The points are the same in every country.
  • Question
    Can a player skip a move?
    Donagan
    Top Answerer
    No.
  • Question
    Can the white king cut off the black king?
    Community Answer
    No. The two kings can never get close enough to each other for one to capture or block the other.
  • Question
    What should I play? e4, d4, c4?
    Donagan
    Top Answerer
    If you're asking about your opening move, moving the king's pawn two spaces to e4 is a popular move, because it opens up diagonals for both the queen and the king's bishop. Be careful with the queen, however. Moving her early in the game can often mean trouble for her.
  • Question
    Can I move the queen if I have a support of my rook?
    Community Answer
    Yes. A rook is a very powerful support tool for the queen. However, try not to move her aggressively early in the game, because it's easy to get her in trouble when your opponent still has a lot of pieces on the board.
  • Question
    When I am in check, can I do free castling?
    Community Answer
    No.
  • Question
    Can a pawn pass another pawn without taking it?
    Donagan
    Top Answerer
    Yes.
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