It all depends on the situation, the placement of the pieces and how far in the game you are...That being said, a knight can access no more than eight squares in one move, where a bishop can access 13 squares maximum. In openings, knights are probably more useful, because they can cover some very important squares, supporting the pawns and such.
There's probably a reason they're both worth three points
Knight can be a better attacker in the middle game but bishops it is easyer to get checkmate in the end game. I would like to have a knight over a bishop.
I like the knight better.
It may move slow but its is awesome when it comes to forks and sacrifices
My favorite
and the favorite... of AMERICA
All games must start with each player having the same two knights and two bishops. As the game progresses a player tends to trade either to gain either an advantage or to maintain equality. A player then tends to fashion his game to suit the material he has versus the material the opponent has.
To answer the question therefore, the knight or the bishop does not really matter. What matters is the result and we know from experience that either or both can be very deadly in forcing one's opponent to resign or give up the exchange.
In my opinion. 2 knights vs 2 bishop it would be bishop but 1 knight vs 1 bishop it would be the knight.But certaintly it depends on the position.
2 knights for me,
so i can fork out all the terrorists...
How many times has this question been asked? :-)
I tend to think the bishops have a little more usability considering their ability to traverse the whole board in one move, whereas the knight is limited to only advancing two ranks, and that they are a natural foil to rooks.
However, the knight also has the advantages of an awkward movement pattern that many people forget to look for potential forks with. It is also the natural foil to the queen (you can attack a queen with a knight without necessarily having protection for it, is what I mean by saying this, whereas a bishop or rook would need protection else they be taken). Also, the ability to jump other pieces is a plus. Also a minus though, as a particular piece you'd like to take might be in the knight's movement pattern, but not on his landing space. So you've got to spend precious time maneuvering him to where he can attack that piece, by which time it might have moved.
Not that the bishop doesn't have his drawbacks as well. If your dark-squared gets taken out, all your opponent has to do is stay off of dark squares and he/she never has to fear a diagonal attack (assuming the queens have been traded, of course).
Wow. Didn't mean to ramble like that. Hope this helps some people. I do recall reading a book that said a bishop was worth 3 and a fraction points. It didn't really say why, though. Oh well.
All in all, I think I generally value the bishop a little more and am a little more reluctant to trade it for a knight unless the situation calls for it. For instance, if I've set up a dark diagonal pawn structure making my dark-square bishop inherently weak and there's a knight deep into my territory that's protected. Then I might trade them. But it does ultimately depend on the situation.
Jim Essman (CoT)
Right on the money
That was a great answer
Thanks for sharing kyuudou (Jim Sman)
me too
I would prefer to play a king pawns and knight endgame against a king pawns and bishop opponent any day. Its so much easier to capture their pawns that way
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