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King (chess)

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
BERJAYA
White king
BERJAYA
Black king
Chess pieces
BERJAYA King BERJAYA
BERJAYA Queen BERJAYA
BERJAYA Rook BERJAYA
BERJAYA Bishop BERJAYA
BERJAYA Knight BERJAYA
BERJAYA Pawn BERJAYA

The king is the most valuable chess piece in a game of chess. It can move left, right, up, down or diagonally. It can only move one square at a time. When recording chess games, king is shortened to K.

The object of the game is to checkmate (capture the king). If a player's king is attacked by an opponent's piece, it is called check. The player with the attacked king must move so that the king is no longer in check. If the king cannot do this, it is in checkmate, and that side loses the game.

Castling

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8
BERJAYA
a1 white rook
c1 left arrow
d1 left arrow
e1 white king
f1 right arrow
g1 right arrow
h1 white rook
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abcdefgh
White's possible moves for castling queenside or kingside

With a rook, the king may make a special move called 'castling'. This is when the king moves two squares toward one of its rooks and then the rook is placed on the other side of the king. Castling consists of moving the king two squares on its first rank toward either one of the first rooks, then moving the rook onto the square over which the king crossed. Castling is only allowed when the king nor the castling rook has moved already, when no squares between them are occupied, when the king is not in check, and when the king will not move across or end its movement on a square that puts the king in check.

Check and Checkmate

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BERJAYA
b7 white bishop
d6 white king
g4 black king
d2 black rook
c1 white bishop
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abcdefgh
White is in check. White has three options:
  • Move the king to a safe square
  • Capture the attacking piece
  • Block the attacking piece with another piece.

If a player's move places the opponent's king under attack, that king is in check, and the player in check is made to stop the attack. There are three possible ways to remove the king from check:

  • Moving the king to an adjacent non-threatened square
  • Blocking the check with another piece between the king in check and the attacking piece in order to break the line of threat (not possible when the attacking piece is a knight, or when in double check).
  • Capturing the attacking piece (not possible in double check, unless the king captures)

If none of these three ways are possible, the player's king has been checkmated and the player with the checkmated king loses the game.

Stalemate

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BERJAYA
d8 white rook
c6 white king
c4 black king
a3 white queen
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abcdefgh
Black is in stalemate. Black is not in check but has no legal moves.

A stalemate is when the player to move has no legal move, but is not in check.

In the opening and middlegame, the king will mostly not play an active role in the development of an attacking or defensive position. Instead, a player will usually castle and find safety on the edge of the board behind pawns. In the endgame, however, the king may comes out of hiding to play an active role as an offensive piece as well as helping in the promotion of their remaining pawns.

References

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  • Brace, Edward R. (1977), An illustrated dictionary of chess, Hamlyn Publishing Group, p. 151, ISBN 1-55521-394-4
  • Barden, Leonard (1980), Play better chess with Leonard Barden, Octopus Books Limited, pp. 9, 11, 12, ISBN 0-7064-0967-1
  • Emanuel Lasker (1934), Lasker's chess primer, Billings (1988 reprint), ISBN 0-7134-6241-8 {{citation}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)