i guess the soldier
The Bishop moves diagonally.
En-passant happens when the opponent moves a pawn up two squares, and only the turn immediately after the pawn moves, next to one of your pawns. Then, you take diagonally to the unoccupied space behind his/her pawn and remove his piece. It is the only chess move where the capturer does not take the opponent's piece's place.
The king can move one square in any direction. If it moves into a square that is occupied by another piece, it takes that piece only if the king is not endangered if it gets next to it in order to capture it.
it moves in an 'L' shape, 2 squares one way - (vertically or horizontally) - and one square in the opposite direction. any piece in the way of the end of the 'L' the knight goes over, but at the tip of the 'L' if there is an opposing piece, the knight only knocks out that piece.
Diagonal attacking is the only way a pawn can capture another chess piece , besides a En Passant capture , since this is the only way a pawn can attack or threaten another chessmen . See related link below to additional information on how a pawn moves , attacks and captures .
There is no rule that says that if only a King is left, it has to survive by 30 moves or loses. The only rule in any way similar to this is that after 50 moves, no piece has been captured by either side AND no pawn has been moved during those 50 moves, then the game is a draw.
No, each chess piece can only take one in a single movement.
yes
50 moves I know wow
The queen is the most powerful piece in chess whereas the most important chess piece would be the king .
No , only the Knight has this power .
The Queen may not move as you described because it is an illegal move - only the knight has the power to jump other chess pieces . ~ See related link below for more information as to how the Queen moves .A:In regular chess, the Queen cannot jump any pieces at all. (The only piece which can jump an intervening pawn or piece is the Knight.)*However, there are versions of chess with alternate rules, known collectively as fairy chess, in which the Queen might be granted Knight-like features, including the ability to jump over a piece rather than capturing it.*And the King, while castling, can in a sense be said to have jumped over the Rook.