yes that is cheatin
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.
The pawn upon it's promotion and properly applied to the strategy in capturing the opponent's king could win the game of chess .
Chess pieces are small, usually made of wood or plastic, and each piece has a specific shape and design. There are six different types of pieces: king, queen, rook, bishop, knight, and pawn. Each type of piece moves in a unique way on the chessboard, with the goal of capturing the opponent's pieces and ultimately checkmating their king to win the game.
No, you only win chess if you capture your opponent's king. Note: there is a little known rule that is you can get a pawn to your opponent's edge you can promote it to any piece you want except a king.
Depends on how you won. If you checked your opponent's king and he cannot block the check, capture the checking piece, or move his king away, you win by checkmate. If your opponent tips his king over and says "I resign" You win by resignation. If your opponent runs out of time in his/her clock, you win by time. If your opponent is 30+min. late, you win by "no-show".
Shogi is a chess-style game. Both players take it in turns to move one of their pieces on the board. Each piece moves in a unique way. Pieces are captured my moving on to them. A captured piece can be dropped onto any square on the board later on. You can promote some pieces by moving into your opponent's camp. The objective is to surround and capture your opponent's king. There are many tactical and strategic factors which determine the difference between a win and a loss. More information is available in English on HIDETCHI's Shogi Videos on YouTube.
2
No , winning the game of chess requires the capture of the king .
You have got to be able to counter their strategy.
In a king vs king and pawn endgame in chess, key strategies include advancing your pawn to promote it to a queen or another powerful piece, using your king to support the pawn's advancement, and controlling key squares to restrict the opponent's king's movement. It is important to calculate accurately and anticipate your opponent's moves to secure a win.
If you lose, you had the opportunity to observe what your opponent did in order to win, and you might learn something from that. Losing at chess can be very educational.
No, in chess, the objective is to checkmate your opponent's king, not to get your own king to the other side of the board.