i have no idea how to checkmate

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bunigutz

i get my opponent's pieces down and try to corner the king, but it always ends in a stalemate. i have no idea how to properly checkmate, it's confusing on what counts as a "safe" space because if i get too close the king can just claim my pieces.

CorgisRuleDude

Usually just check for these things:

1. Can my opponent move any piece on the field

2. Are all my pieces safe after I make this move

Fr3nchToastCrunch

The best thing to do is leave the king with two safe squares. This guarantees a move, and doesn't allow it to escape.

For example, the queen mate:

 

King and rook can be harder, but this is the idea:

Checkmating with the bishop pair, or a bishop and a knight, is also a thing, but they're much more rare, and thus aren't nearly as "essential" as these two.

If you're in a different position, there are some other ideas that can work:

1. Underpromotion.

Promote to rooks instead of queens, even if it's unnecessary, as they have less movement and are thus less restrictive.

2. Only play checks.

A stalemate involves the king not being attacked; a check is the very opposite of that. This probably isn't very good advice for actually checkmating (unless you accidentally do it), but still.

3. Leave a piece or two alive.

Shut down any possible counter-play if you get too complacent, but otherwise leave a piece(s) that can move helplessly as you set up a checkmate.

4. Draw arrows.

This is the most important part. Try drawing arrows (right-click and drag) to visualize where your pieces would attack after your move; does the king have an available move in the event that you play this? If the answer is no, and no other piece(s) can move, do not play the move.

5. PAY ATTENTION.

This is really what it all boils down to. Take your time if needed (and if you can), but remember that you can never be too careful.

tom30356

Mate rule: Make sure the king can't escape from the check .

TrogonTails
I'm new to chess and was confused about this too so did some reading. The king has to be in check AND have no legal moves. If you just get to no legal moves when not in check then it's a stalemate. The chess.com lessons on checkmate and draw were more useful the 2nd time after I'd played and had a better understanding.
RichColorado

Get a beginner book $10.00 Barnes & Noble . . .

XAMAX_chess

To mate with a queen, you need to imagine it's a knight and give checks until the king is cornered, make sure the king has 2 squares to avoid a stalemate, bring the king, and mate

WhatHappenedGuy
Gotta check with the king having nowhere to go
magipi
Fr3nchToastCrunch wrote:

For example, the queen mate:

This is too difficult for an absolute beginner. First it's better to teach how to mate with 2 rooks (the ladder mate).

PepperX69

I was just going against Jimmy

PepperX69

The trick I think is to get 2 queen's or just you the jumpy boi(knight)

Imposter_H

Checkmate is when your king is in a check and can't move anywhere and cannot capture anything