It moves the same, but cannot castle again.
Move him by the castle.
no he also cant move into check via castle
Absolutely, but the process involves a little different location of the moved Rook, depending if it is the Queen's rook or the King's rook.
In chess, castling is a move that allows the king and a rook to move at the same time. To castle, move the king two squares towards the rook, and then move the rook to the square next to the king on the opposite side. Castling can only be done if neither the king nor the rook have moved before, there are no pieces between them, and the king is not in check.
To queenside castle in chess, move your king two squares towards the rook on the queen's side, then move the rook to the square next to the king on the opposite side. This move allows you to protect your king and connect your rooks for better control of the board.
In Mac Chess, to castle, move the king two squares towards the rook, then move the rook to the square next to the king. This move can only be done if neither piece has moved before and there are no pieces between them.
To perform a queen side castle in chess, move the king two squares towards the queen side and then move the rook to the square next to the king on the opposite side. This move allows the king to move to a safer position and the rook to be more active in the game.
To perform a long castle in chess, move the king two squares towards the rook on its original square, then move the rook to the square next to the king on the opposite side. This move can only be done if neither the king nor the rook has moved before, there are no pieces between them, and the king is not in check.
Because it's against the rules.
To castle in Mac Chess, move the king two squares towards the rook, then move the rook to the square next to the king on the opposite side. This move can only be done if neither piece has moved before and there are no pieces between them.
To perform a queenside castle in chess, move your king two squares towards the rook on the queenside, then move the rook to the square next to the king on the opposite side. This move can only be done if neither the king nor the rook has moved before and if there are no pieces between them.
Castling in chess is usually used to protect the king and/or begin the development of the rook. There are some restrictions. First, there can't be any pieces between the king and the rook. Second, you can't castle if you have already moved the king or the rook you want to castle with. Third, if the square beside the king and between the king and the rook is under attack, you cannot castle. (You'd be moving the king "across" an attacked square, which is not allowed.) Lastly, you cannot castle if your king is in check. (You cannot castle to get out of check.) To castle, first move the king two squares towards the rook on the side you wish to castle on. Then pick up the rook and put it on the square that king "passed over" when it was moved to castle.