No, the king cannot attack while in check.
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No, the king cannot attack when in check.
No, the king cannot attack if he is in check. The king must first get out of check before making any moves.
No, when in check, the king cannot attack. The king must first get out of check before making any moves.
No, a king cannot attack in chess.
The king is never permanently restricted to moving only within a certain area.If in check, a player must either move the king out of check, block the attack line with another piece, or capture the piece that is putting the king in check. A king cannot castle while in check. A player may also not castle if doing so would result in him being in check (or the rook used in the move to be under attack).A king who has been in check but is no longer in check has all the same capabilities as a king that has never been in check.
You cannot capture opposite king in chess. You can attack him with check, and your opponent should immediately defend it. If the opponent has no way to defend, it is checkmate and you are awarded victory of the game.
Yes, a pawn can put a king in check in a game of chess by moving diagonally to attack the king if it is in its path.
Yes, the king can move out of check, provided that doing so is a legal move (i.e. does not move into check again). If it cannot and there is no other way to defend the check, then it is mate.
Yes, it can, as long as it doesn't put the king in check. PS, it's "capture", not "kill".
King George the Second died of a heart attack while in the bathroom.
Yes, the king may capture the piece that is checking it.Yes, but only if that piece is on a square adjoining him, as a king has mobility of only one square per move.
The king can capture a piece and put the opponent's king in check by moving to a square where it can capture the opponent's piece while also threatening the opponent's king.