The 5 basic checkmates are:
- KQ vs. K
- KR vs. K
- KBB vs. K
- KBN vs. K
- KNN vs. KP
Every chess player should know these.
Capablanca treats these in his beginner book A Primer of Chess.
The 5 basic checkmates are:
Every chess player should know these.
Capablanca treats these in his beginner book A Primer of Chess.
@25
KNN vs. KP is rare, but happens occasionally in tournament play
https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1151993
I have saved many games by turning a lost position into KBN vs. K, with the opponent failing to checkmate.
@25
KNN vs. KP is rare, but happens occasionally in tournament play
https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1151993
I have saved many games by turning a lost position into KBN vs. K, with the opponent failing to checkmate.
That's different than KNN v KP isn't it
Which position? (Half of these are possible, half are not). Which computer? What depth?
SF (any version except possibly beyond 15.1 - latest version I have) Intel(R) Pentium(R) CPU J3710 @ 1.60GHz 1.60 GHz 3GB hash.
Any White to mate in more than 45 moves at 40/120 repeating, also usually Black to mate.
Fewer if you have NNUE switched on - it appears to be a liability in this endgame (KBNvK also).
(Assumes no tablebase of course.)
E.g., a particularly incompetent attempt by SF15 at a mate in 36:
@25
KNN vs. KP is rare, but happens occasionally in tournament play
KNN vs. KP used to be rare.
Troitzky could find only 6 recorded instances of master games when he produced his analysis in the 1940s.
But that appears to have been because players didn't understand it, so avoided it.
These days it's more prevalent and you get things like this.
Interesting to note in that example that neither Gurevich (who went on to win the tournament) nor the author realised that Gurevich had offered a draw when he had a simple win, so my comment about understanding it could be unduly optimistic.
What position do you have in mind? There might be some tricky ones (where both pawns are close to queening), but generally this should be super easy.
Without consulting a tablebase, who, if anyone, wins this position and would it depend on whether it's FIDE basic rules or competition rules?
are you calling 4 basic?