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In the game of chess- when moving a rook and a king in the special move called "Castling" what is the point of this move? I understand how it is made, but not why. Is there a strategic advantage? Is it a protective move (I'd assume it is since most moves involving the king are)? To any chess players out there- I'd like to hear from you!

2007-12-30 16:21:14 · 8 answers · asked by Nijojo 4 in Games & Recreation Board Games

8 answers

prior to the castling move, the queen had just been granted her current power, which was found to really be quite overwhelming against a king in the center of the board, giving white far too much of an advantage (since he could moblize first). thus, castling rule was invented as a way to even things out and make it a litte harder to checkmate a guy. In modern chess, this really only remains true when the center opens up, but sometimes this is impossible (in the old days it was sortof thought that not quickly challenging and blasting open the center would leave u lost, its now understood this is not true). if the center is permenantly fixed then you could consider not castlign since the king is ultimately a peice like any other, and likes to be in the center. however, it can be very trickly to develop both rooks if u dont castle. when rooks are not united on the same rank, and the oppoents are, then he will win any fight for any open file, because if u exchange, he recaptures with a rook, and u cant.
but ultimately yes, it is a defensive move, because in chess all peices struggle for the center, so if your king is there, the enemy can easily use your king against you. there is simply too much action in the center in an open game to risk leaving yr king there.

2007-12-30 17:03:24 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Castling In Chess

2016-10-02 04:42:36 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Castling is the most powerful move in chess!
No other move lets you move the King two spaces and no other move lets you move two pieces in a single move!
Imagine how many attacks are stymied by this dramatic and sudden change of position!
Suddenly the King is protected, the rook is in a position that immediately protects the rear rank and at the same time is more easily developed into an attack!

2007-12-30 17:44:47 · answer #3 · answered by another voice in the crowd 3 · 1 1

castling moves the king into a safer position and makes the rook active because it controls the files. [files are like vertical lines composed. they are verticals.] the king will be protected by the rook and usually by three pawns infront of it.

2007-12-30 18:35:51 · answer #4 · answered by dustfinger 2 · 2 0

It puts the king in a more protect position and develops a rook for attack.

2007-12-30 17:10:57 · answer #5 · answered by Sidewinder 2 · 0 0

It is done to protect the king and make the rooks face each other to give a stronger defence and a more potent attack.

2007-12-30 16:25:31 · answer #6 · answered by Akilesh - Internet Undertaker 7 · 2 0

it protects the king and gets the rook into play

2007-12-31 02:48:53 · answer #7 · answered by evrettbgo 5 · 0 0

The purpose of castling is to protect the king.

2007-12-31 02:46:34 · answer #8 · answered by tom745 3 · 0 0

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