• dandelion (she/her)@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    2 days ago

    for those that don’t know chess notation or aren’t that familiar with chess

    here's the solution:

    it’s white’s turn, the solution is:

    1. white moves the knight from e8 to f6
    2. black king takes the knight (moves from e5 to f6)
    3. white moves knight from c3 to d5, causing checkmate

    This creates checkmate condition because there are two pieces causing check, the white knight at d6 and the white bishop at b2:

    • black can either move the black pawn at a3 to take the white bishop at b2
    • or black can move the black pawn at c6 to d5 to take the white knight

    but because black can’t do both in a single turn, or otherwise block the check from both pieces, it’s a checkmate - there is no way out of it

      • yes, I think this puzzle hinges on the king taking the bait - I don’t really know why taking the bait is obligatory, the knight at f6 doesn’t put the king in check, so it’s not like the king has to move and take the knight to get out of check, right?

        • Daisy (she/her)@lemmy.ml
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          1 day ago

          No, because then you make Nd7#, both blocking the king’s escape and attacking the king in the same move. Took a while to see all the options for this one, but I do believe the checkmate is forced.

          • ThirdConsul@lemmy.ml
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            15 hours ago

            It is! Thank you for that extra step!

            And if you take the knight with tbe black knight to f6, then f3 to f4 #