Chess was invented in India in about B.C. periods. About time, it will become one of the most played and known board games on Earth. The game is played on an 8x8 board with 64 pieces. There are 2 colors, White and Black, Blue and Black, Green and White, etc. Each color is separated into 32 pieces, with each 8 pawns, 2 rooks, bishops, and knights, and there is each a queen and king. To move the pawn, play 2 or 1 square forward, and then 1 square forward afterward. You capture 1 square higher diagonally, or en passant, which refers to apa pawn next to a pawn that just moved two squares forward. Take it by putting the pawn 1 square over the pawn. To move the Rook, play it horizontally and diagonally. It may not play diagonally. To move the bishop, move it diagonally. For example, a white squared bishop can only move in diagonal white squares. To move the knight, you can play it in an L, and it can jump over the pieces. The queen can move diagonally, horizontally, and vertically. To move the king, move 1 square near it. You can not move your king in the sight of pieces. Like, you cannot move your king in a white diagonal square that is capturable by the bishop. To checkmate is to trap and check the king at the same time without having any legal moves. In a draw, there are many ways, like repeating moves three times, resulting in repetition. The 50-Move Rule, which stops a game after 50 moves without capturing a piece or the absence of a pawn. The 75-Move Rule is put and absolute if the players wish to continue the game. There is also what we call insufficient material, in which the current state of the game is impossible to checkmate the king. And there are other wins and draws, like Stalemate in which the King is trapped with no legal moves, but not checking the king. Timeout is a win when a time period for a player is at , and Timeout and Insuffiecient Material, a draw, in which there is no material to checkmate and the time of a player ran out. Ask me for more.
Chess was invented in India in about B.C. periods. About time, it will become one of the most played and known board games on Earth. The game is played on an 8x8 board with 64 pieces. There are 2 colors, White and Black, Blue and Black, Green and White, etc. Each color is separated into 32 pieces, with each 8 pawns, 2 rooks, bishops, and knights, and there is each a queen and king. To move the pawn, play 2 or 1 square forward, and then 1 square forward afterward. You capture 1 square higher diagonally, or en passant, which refers to a pawn next to a pawn that just moved two squares forward. Take it by putting the pawn 1 square over the pawn. To move the Rook, play it horizontally and diagonally. It may not play diagonally. To move the bishop, move it diagonally. For example, a white squared bishop can only move in diagonal white squares. To move the knight, you can play it in an L, and it can jump over the pieces. The queen can move diagonally, horizontally, and vertically. To move the king, move 1 square near it. You can not move your king in the sight of pieces. Like, you cannot move your king in a white diagonal square that is capturable by the bishop. To checkmate is to trap and check the king at the same time without having any legal moves. In a draw, there are many ways, like repeating moves three times, resulting in repetition. The 50-Move Rule, which stops a game after 50 moves without capturing a piece or the absence of a pawn. The 75-Move Rule is put and absolute if the players wish to continue the game. There is also what we call insufficient material, in which the current state of the game is impossible to checkmate the king. And there are other wins and draws, like Stalemate in which the King is trapped with no legal moves, but not checking the king. Timeout is a win when a time period for a player is at , and Timeout and Insufficient Material, a draw, in which there is no material to checkmate and the time of a player ran out. Ask me for more.