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My friend challeged me to chess one day and wouldn't accept that I beat him and challeged me to a rematch, but i don't want to take to long and i want to know how to do the there move check.

2007-05-09 08:21:02 · 5 answers · asked by ? 2 in Games & Recreation Board Games

5 answers

I will use old notation as that is the way I learned it. I will assume black does not move to block it, so will only list the white moves.

King Pawn to King 4.
Queen to King Bishop 3
Queen to KIng Bishop 7 check.

Of course, he will take the queen with the king so the whole three move check is just a stupid thing to do.

Now, if you did the following:

King Pawn to King 4.
Queen to King Bishop 3 or King Rook 5
King Bishop to Queen Bishop 4
Queen to King Bishop 7 check mate.

He can not take the queen because she is protected by the bishop. This is called the fool's mate.

2007-05-09 09:00:45 · answer #1 · answered by forgivebutdonotforget911 6 · 1 0

The only way that you can't win in those 3 or 4 moves is if your opponet blocks those moves and is clueless to what you are doing. Otherwise it is a shoein for you to win! I've won that way a couple of times with out even realizing what I was doing and how I won. It was a fluke. But even so write down the moves because its not that easy to remember. Unless you can memerize very easily! Good luck.

2007-05-10 15:13:12 · answer #2 · answered by jrealitytv 6 · 0 0

the only way you may wreck out with it is while the opponent is calling any incorrect way. it is named Le Cheat and is rarely used because of the fact maximum gamers stare on the boards, yet in 1912 Alexander Vishnovsky won the international Championship from Valdimir Yulonovich after enjoying the infamous bare lady Gambit to distract Yulonovich (enjoying as Black) then appearing a Le Cheat, shifting his King from a1-b3, getting him out of an otherwise particular checkmate.

2016-12-11 04:48:53 · answer #3 · answered by mento 4 · 0 0

If you mean "scholar's mate":

1. e4 e5
2. Bc4 Bc5
3. Qh5 d6
4. Qxf7#

Black may try to prevent it with 3. ...g6, but this would be a huge mistake. 4. Qxe5+ wins the rook on h8.

"Fool's mate" as referred to by the guy above is actually:

1. f3 e5
2. g4 Qh4#

So-called because you'd have to be a "fool" to allow it.

2007-05-09 11:03:28 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You really can't checkmate in three or four moves onless your opponant does something really dumb.

2007-05-10 09:46:28 · answer #5 · answered by WolverLini 7 · 0 0

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