No. This is because in theory, checking the enemy king by leaving your king exposed to a check will result in your opponent capturing your king before you can capture theirs.
The king can avoid checkmate by moving to a safe square, capturing the threatening piece, or blocking the attacking piece's path.
you get them in check and they cant block, move, ortake the piece that is forcing you in check
The goal in chess, or the object of the game, is to checkmate your opponent's king. A king is in checkmate when he is attacked and no matter what move he attempts to make he is still being attacked (or in check). There are three ways to get out of check: move the king to a safe square, capture the checking piece, or block with another piece. If a player is in check and cannot get out of check, he is in checkmate and has lost the game.
No. You may not move INTO check. If that is the only move available, it would then depend whether or not you are already in check. If you are in check and cannot move to a square where you are not in check, it is checkmate, the game is over, and you have lost. If you are not in check, but cannot move without going into check, and you have no other piece or pawn that can move, then it is stalemate, and the game is a draw.
In chess, in order for a check to be a checkmate, there are three specific conditions: 1) The king must not be able to move out of check. 2) The attacking piece must not be capture-able. 3) No pieces must be able to block the check.
Only if the piece won't be able to attack him then. Example: moving in front of a bishop is okay. Moving in front of a pawn is okay. Moving in front of a knight is okay. King, rook, or queen? No ma'am/sir.
The objective of chess is to checkmate the king, where the king is in check by a piece and it cannot block the check, move to another square, or capture the piece checking the king.
You don't have to say either. No chess rule requires it, and it may be distracting to your opponent or those around you in a tournament. If you achieve checkmate, you should offer a handshake, or do whatever you normally do to conclude your games, but you do not have to say "checkmate."
To make sure that you do not move a piece into danger and therefore possibly lose it, or open up a move that will allow for opponent to check or checkmate your king
A win. No matter how quick Black or White checkmates his opponent, it will always be a win. The quickest checkmate can be performed in 2 moves.
Depends by which rules and standards you are going by. Some say no and if you take another piece to get out of check-mate then it was technically just check, other rules state that its check-mate if all other avenues of movement are blocked and the only way out of check-mate is to take the piece then yes it is possible.
In chess, a checkmate move is a move that one makes that puts the opponent in a position where the king piece has nowhere to move.