well said Masked_Titan3000 ! Never take any chess position for granted. As long as the game is not over, your opponent is always thinking of ways to hurt you.
These positions of R+K versus R+K are common. When I was in high school, one of my team members had an extra few pawns in this type ending. He should have won, but lost his few pawns and was just left with the above type ending. Sure enough, he let his opponent fake him out and win ! That taught my team mate a very valuable lesson. He focused much more after that debacle !
I recently played a 3|2 game, which means that I had 2 second bonus time for each move I play and turns out this game was instructive, so I wanted you, as the audience to have a detailed glance at this game! And of course, I don't want you to judge the game by the opening or the poor middlegame, but by the endgame!
Details-
I was black and gained no points as this was an unrated open-challenge seek accepted game. This game was played ON the 14th of February around 2:30 pm Ist.
Now what I want young, unexperienced chess players out there to learn is how to break the drawn endgame position and covert it into a winning one.
Here is a detailed explanation of it!
take the example from my game
black had no choice and even if he had gone kf4, I would have still taken the rook.
More examples
2.
As you can see endgames are very important if you want to really improve at the game of chess. I hope you have learnt something new from the above explanations, if you didn't please tell why and how you didn't understand, I will try to help as much as I CAN to help you out