No. Captured Chess pieces are pieces that have been taken from the board by other pieces, and as such are no longer part of the game. However if a pawn makes it to the 'far' rank (the row closest to your opponent) it may be 'promoted' to any piece besides a king (traditionally it is promoted to a queen)
No , the Knight can , as any chess piece , only capture the square upon which it lands .
In the game of chess there is a chess piece called the Queen.
In algebraic notation of chess, an "x" represents a capture. For example, "Qxe6" would mean that the player's queen captured an enemy piece on e6.
In chess, a king can capture any other piece except another king. Getting next to a the opposing king puts you in check because it allows your king to be taken first losing the game. Moving next to the opposing queen is the same situation unless the queen moves next to the king as some sort of sacrifice ploy.
You capture it.
The queen
No.
You capture the King piece.
A queen represents the most powerful piece in a game of chess. Although, it's not as important as the king, as you can still continue the game after it has been captured. The queen is usually represented by a linear wooden figure with a majestic crown placed atop of it.
The most valuable piece in chess is the King whose capture is the goal of the game itself . The pawn = 1 point , the knight = 3 points , the bishop = 3 , the rook = 5 points and the queen is worth 9 points .
yes it can capture
Chess .