why the heck d all this when it's mate in one.
Daily Puzzle Submissions! *Be Involved*
Try this one!!!!
And if I play 4. f3 instead of 4. Qe4??
Oh, Whoops!!!!!!

there is a mate in one Rxh5#

An easy puzzle, mate in 3. I wanted to show winning of a side with considerably less material.
you can do Ng5+ than Nc6# mate in two,

An easy puzzle, mate in 3. I wanted to show winning of a side with considerably less material.
If you solve it your way (which I think is correct), isn't it really a 4-move checkmate:
1. Ng5+, Kd7
2. Bg4, Be6
3. Bxe6, Ke8
4. Nf6#

An easy puzzle, mate in 3. I wanted to show winning of a side with considerably less material.
you can do Ng5+ than Nc6# mate in two,
I assume you meant Nf6, but doing that before the bishop is on the diagonal just lets the black king escape to c8 and white will lose.

How sis 1? Mate in 2....quite hard.
Doesn't 1. Qxd8 also mate in 2, because now the only way to stop 2. Bh3# is for black to move 1. ...Nf6/Nh6/Ne7, hoping to interpose on g4 or f5 for a move, which is met by 2. Qxf6#/Qf6#?
And if 1. Qe2+, why does black move 1. ...Kf7?, which leads immediately to 2. gxh8=N#? Why not instead 1. ... Kf5, which while not wonderful leaves white no mating moves on its second move?
There was a mate in two here--it's just not the given solution.
I would propose a shorter solution, just move Tower from g5 to h5.