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Yes, in chess, a player must be in check before checkmate can occur. Checkmate is the situation where the player's king is in a position to be captured and there are no legal moves to prevent it.
Yes. Checkmate is a player's position on the board that places the opponent in such a position that no escape or defense is possible, thus ending the game.
The ultimate move in chess that signals the end of the game and signifies victory for one player is called a checkmate.
The position in football responsible for tackling opponents on the field is the defensive player, specifically the linebacker or defensive back.
A player should say "checkmate" in a game of chess when their opponent's king is in a position where it cannot escape capture, signifying the end of the game and the player's victory.
they would say checkmate if the king is trapped and cant get out that usually wins the game
It is associated with chess. A checkmate is when one player puts the other player's king in a position where it can get it without further moves. A stale mate, on the other hand, is when the player puts the other player's king in a situation where the king cannot make a further move from any direction and is thereby trapped.
A player declares checkmate - when he is certain his opponent can make no more legal moves.
Yes the ultimate tyranno must attack all the opponents monster considered legal targets. This will consume all the monsters attack power for that turn so the attack cannot be directed to the player's life in the same turn.
The rule that a pawn can not give checkmate probably stems from the rule that a piece may not be placed in a position from where it is unable to promote or continue. A pawn may only give checkmate by being placed directly in front of the emperor; a position from where it is unable to move or promote. It can not take the emperor piece as it could with other pieces, and it can not be promoted until it moves again. In Shogi, violating rules such as "Two pawns can not occupy the same column" or "a piece can not be placed in a position where it is unable to move or promote" results in an immediate loss for the one who violated the rule. Thus, by placing a pawn in this location, the player automatically loses the game by violation of a rule. The checkmate that the player gives doesn't matter because it was obtained through the rule's violation. In certain Shogi variations, such as yari shogi, a pawn can be used to give checkmate.
Chess, checkmate is when you have someone in check and they cant get out of it, and stalemate is when a player cant move his peices
"CHECKMATE!!!!!!!"