Yes it can be
Yes, in the game of chess, a king can put a queen in check if the queen is in a position where it can be captured on the next move by the king.
In chess, you say "check" when your opponent's king is in a position to be captured on the next move.
Yes, in the game of chess, a king can put a queen in check if the queen is in a position where it can be captured on the next move by the king.
Yes, in a game of chess, the king can put the queen in check if the queen is in a position where it can be captured on the next move.
King Charles was captured in LA ZONA in ojinaga Mexico
To ensure your king is safe from being captured in chess, move it to a castle (also known as castling) out of check. Castling involves moving the king two squares towards a rook on the player's first rank, then moving the rook to the square over which the king crossed. This move helps protect the king and can also bring the rook into play.
This hypothetical position would never come true, because when the king is in check, the king may not move to a square where it may be taken. This is called an illegal move. Therefore, the game is not over unless the person who is moving the king resigns or is checkmated. Also, a king may never move to a square where it may be captured. A king may not be captured; it may only be either stalemated or checkmated.
King David.
Absolutely. The King or any other piece for that matter may move regardless of the fact that the Queen has been captured as long as the move is a legal move. Although, if your Queen has been captured and you haven't taken the other Queen, your King may not be moving for much longer as it is probably destined for a checkmate.
If you can save your King you have to.
King Cyrus the Great.
Yes, in chess, a player must be in check before checkmate can occur. Checkmate is the situation where the player's king is in a position to be captured and there are no legal moves to prevent it.