Can I premove on daily games?

Sort:
Ollixter

It would be nice to premove a rook and capture a free pawn, or just premove taking a piece so I don’t have to later. Is there any way? Just curious

Bruce_Streams

Hi Lamplite - they have that feature. It's called; "Premoves" (it's a button near the resign/draw buttons on website). It lets you enter scenarios for example if player goes; d4 you can premove exd4 etc up to as many moves as you like. If you predict 5 moves ahead and player deviates from your prediction, then it stops at that point for your move. It saves a lot of time potentially rather than waiting days for your opponents next move. Also, I've found that if you predict some moves ahead the opponent is more likely to move more than just their one move as they see you anticipated that move and they're curious what you're next one after that is.

NoemiS05
Bruce_Streams wrote:

Hi Lamplite - they have that feature. It's called; "Premoves" (it's a button near the resign/draw buttons on website). It lets you enter scenarios for example if player goes; d4 you can premove exd4 etc up to as many moves as you like. If you predict 5 moves ahead and player deviates from your prediction, then it stops at that point for your move. It saves a lot of time potentially rather than waiting days for your opponents next move. Also, I've found that if you predict some moves ahead the opponent is more likely to move more than just their one move as they see you anticipated that move and they're curious what you're next one after that is.

"Conditional Moves"

Bruce_Streams

Sorry yeah, it's called; "Conditional Moves". happy.png

Ollixter
Bruce_Streams wrote:

Hi Lamplite - they have that feature. It's called; "Premoves" (it's a button near the resign/draw buttons on website). It lets you enter scenarios for example if player goes; d4 you can premove exd4 etc up to as many moves as you like. If you predict 5 moves ahead and player deviates from your prediction, then it stops at that point for your move. It saves a lot of time potentially rather than waiting days for your opponents next move. Also, I've found that if you predict some moves ahead the opponent is more likely to move more than just their one move as they see you anticipated that move and they're curious what you're next one after that is.

Ahh, i see. Thanks