5 Epic Single Bishop Mate Chess Problems

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  • čas přidán 6. 07. 2024
  • This kind of stuff makes chess beautiful! Follow along and try to solve these 5 incredible chess puzzles involving the single bishop mate.
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Komentáře • 172

  • @Thamboo111
    @Thamboo111 Před 2 lety +84

    These puzzles are realy great!! ... but I have a suggestion ... I lose a lot of games because people play openings that I dont know , and of course I am not the only victim to this problem , so I think if you make an opening series it will be great for me and for others , so yeah , keep it up !!

    • @sayansarkar9803
      @sayansarkar9803 Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah mate.... I second this..... Like if you could make some videos of openings for both black and white

    • @Thamboo111
      @Thamboo111 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes

    • @andre11zz
      @andre11zz Před 2 lety +1

      If they start with non sense openings you can do fine just developing your pieces normally. There's no guaranteed win opening, so as long as you dont blunder any pawns/pieces it all will come down to middle and endgame skills

    • @Thamboo111
      @Thamboo111 Před 2 lety +2

      You are right , but sometimes the opening if it didnt take the right way .. you will mess it up , this is the point .

    • @junkcuber5611
      @junkcuber5611 Před 2 lety +1

      Focus on your end game tactics, you will be surprised how much it will help your middle game. Knowing openings is nice, but you are better off focusing on tactics like Nelson does very well with instruction… rather than focusing on new lines.

  • @danielbillings1876
    @danielbillings1876 Před 2 lety +20

    You’re such a chess nerd…I love it!! The joy on your face while talking about these positions makes the content even better!

  • @krishnathiagarajan8290
    @krishnathiagarajan8290 Před 2 lety +17

    These are engaging videos. I enjoy trying to solve the puzzles myself! Thanks, Nelson.

  • @alexanderxyz6146
    @alexanderxyz6146 Před 2 lety +4

    8:27 self note1 Ke4? = draw
    10:15 sn2 kd3? = better king pawn for black
    11:08 sn2 pg3? = Mate in 2

  • @brianamo3393
    @brianamo3393 Před 2 lety +2

    Good vid . This goes along great with your end game videos. Got to activate the king to get into these positions. Your videos definitely help me out .

  • @nickcellino1503
    @nickcellino1503 Před 2 lety +1

    In Position 4, Black has the option of playing 4...e6+ instead of 4...Kf7. White still wins but must play carefully.
    4... e6+ 5. Kd6! Kf7 (if 5... e5, 6. Ke6 with the same idea of guarding the g7 pawn with the King and capturing the advancing e pawn with the Bishop) 6. Ke5 Kg8 7. Kf6 e5 8. Ke7! e4 9. Kf6 e3 7. Bxe3 and wins

  • @yoav613
    @yoav613 Před 2 lety +1

    That was very nice,really enjoyed it!! Please give us more like this😃👍👍

  • @matixd7157
    @matixd7157 Před 2 lety +3

    In the first puzzle you can do bishop f6, black moves king f8 takes knight and white queen b8 checkmate

  • @zephyr4960
    @zephyr4960 Před 2 lety +3

    I also found the sequence:
    Bh6+, Kg8, Ke6 (black has no pieces to move because pawns are blocked) Kh8 is forced, Kh7, e6 is forced, then checkmate with Bg7# or g7#. No queen sacrifice is necessary.

    • @nickcellino1503
      @nickcellino1503 Před 2 lety

      Kh8 is not forced. Your try fails to hxg after Ke6.

  • @advancedPawn
    @advancedPawn Před 2 lety +3

    Awesome video. I really like the last one, where the opponent queen couldn't do anything sensible other than sacrifice itself in vain. 🤣

  • @zacharyf.9936
    @zacharyf.9936 Před 2 lety

    Nelson awesome video, all these stumped me and hence learning from your examples and analysis. Thank you!

  • @mse181
    @mse181 Před 2 lety

    wonderful how certain positions can blow your mind! wonderful game! thanks for this video

  • @daleleisenring4275
    @daleleisenring4275 Před 2 lety +3

    Troitzky was a great endgame composer who came up with very artistic positions that teach the art of chess. I noticed all the positions were from decades or centuries ago when people played ONE game without a clock, taking hours, days or weeks. These positions will almost never be found in blitz, bullet or lightning games. (The fast food equivalent of chess). Perhaps that is why Fischer said blitz destroys the creative process or some such. Play slower and realize the game wasn't created to see who can move pieces fastest, it was made to move the pieces best.

    • @alexanderxyz6146
      @alexanderxyz6146 Před 2 lety

      Best comment here. Yea I like to analyze positions and think about cool ways to play and what not.
      And I like to add: Playing openings from memory (because everything is figured nowadays) is efficient but less fun.

    • @dash_r_media
      @dash_r_media Před rokem

      I don't recall Fischer saying that about blitz; I know Botvinnik didn't care for it.

  • @jakubdabrowski7774
    @jakubdabrowski7774 Před 2 lety

    Those positions were amazing, best puzzles ever!

  • @kajuanweaver1607
    @kajuanweaver1607 Před 2 lety

    Loving these kinds of vids

  • @MohitGarg2905
    @MohitGarg2905 Před rokem +1

    In last puzzle, after bishop c7, black can play pawn g4. This will open up square for king.

  • @pennythecat
    @pennythecat Před 2 lety

    New to you-enjoyable games to figure out-subscribed. Thanks.

  • @oldschool1993
    @oldschool1993 Před rokem

    14:07 How about Q G1 check- King takes queen- then Pawn to G4- Bishop D8 check- King G3 - Bishop C7 check- King H4-Bishop D8 check - ad infinitum- white must keep checking or black king will escape to a white diagonal then it's 3 black pawns against a bishop and 1 pawn.

  • @clintongryke6887
    @clintongryke6887 Před 2 lety +1

    Whoa! Number 5 is a real treat!

  • @JMTavares7
    @JMTavares7 Před rokem +1

    In position 4 I think it's a better try for Black to push pawn immediately rather than Kf2. Doesn't this break the puzzle?
    if ...e6+
    Kxe6 draws, else ... Kf7 and now g8+ no longer works.... I guess I can confirm with an engine, either way I'm surprised you didn't go over this line.

  • @abimanyukarthik9738
    @abimanyukarthik9738 Před 2 lety

    Great video Nelson!

  • @vladislavchessmate1567

    Good one. Lets go in next video. 5 amazing single knight checkmates

  • @snatermans
    @snatermans Před 2 lety +7

    In position 5, @14:07 "There's nowhere the queen could move that's any good" We've seen the analysis that the queen must keep defending the g3 square, but this is not the case in case of a check..
    Is Queen g1 not good? It's a check, after which King has to take [King g1] Now moving the pawn up for black is an option [Pawn g5>g4]. Now the king has 2 options, white can force 3 repeat draw, or continue to play? (still a losing position, but better then a quick mate. I cant see what's wrong with it, but possibly I'm missing something.

    • @snatermans
      @snatermans Před 2 lety +1

      Also: when I was pausing @10:10 I was gonna move the king up first, before getting the bishop in, is that a worse move?
      edit: Nevermind this, I think it gives the queen the opportunity to give a check on our favorite diagonal :)

    • @gungrave6923
      @gungrave6923 Před 2 lety +1

      Just checked with an engine, the original position is winning, but they don't want to take the knight, they just push the g pawn.

    • @snatermans
      @snatermans Před 2 lety

      @@gungrave6923 not what i'm saying, but tnx.

    • @gungrave6923
      @gungrave6923 Před 2 lety +1

      @@snatermans breifly looked at that to. Forgot to add it to my comment. But yea looks like you're right, it saves black for a while and stops it from being a mate threat

    • @aaditnoronha5383
      @aaditnoronha5383 Před 2 lety +2

      @@snatermans its winning after Qg1, bishop just takes queenside pawn and makes new queen, black cant make progress on kingside

  • @alexanderxyz6146
    @alexanderxyz6146 Před rokem +1

    I just realized #2 wasn't actually that easy. Nd5! was the actual killer one (3:20). It prevented black's Nc3 or Nb4 which would have continued to counter any good bishop movement from white - go figure it's actually insane how the black knight could have covered each bishop check depending on where the bishop went to prepare the check, such as f4 or g5 (or e3). (literally every available bishop check) But by placing the knight on d5 black first had to capture it with the bishop which brought white the necessary tempo and he got unstoppable. Quite an epic setup from white. (and with the king in prison) And as always it's so beautiful because it's all about that one move tempo advantage, the exciting part in any good puzzle.

  • @cameronford6149
    @cameronford6149 Před 2 lety

    Really nice puzzles :)

  • @n8style
    @n8style Před 2 lety

    this was awesome! thought I'd solved the last one but wasn't even close lol then I had 3 "Woah!" moments for it haha

  • @FunnyProductions24
    @FunnyProductions24 Před 2 lety

    These were awesome

  • @adamhowden9863
    @adamhowden9863 Před 2 lety +3

    10:24 after bc7, g4 is completely winning. Bd8+ is powerless to stop the king marching out without the king in position

    • @Kokurorokuko
      @Kokurorokuko Před 2 lety

      What? Bd8+ leads to mate or loss of a queen to a bishop

    • @kidthebilly7766
      @kidthebilly7766 Před 2 lety +1

      no its not, white goes Kh2 then either g3 or Bg3 for a guaranteed checkmate.
      no matter what move black takes white is winning

    • @WilliamSanders1111
      @WilliamSanders1111 Před 2 lety

      @@Kokurorokuko If Bd8+ then black plays Kg3, stopping white from playing Kh2.

    • @kj6221
      @kj6221 Před 2 lety

      g4 can be followed by g3+. Now there are only 2 possibilities: Qx3g or Kg5 (which is followed by Bf4+ where bishop is protected by the g3 pawn). Either way white exchanges bishop for queen, then Nd3 ensures white takes c rank pawn on next move and eventually queens b3 pawn and wins.

  • @NidusFormicarum
    @NidusFormicarum Před rokem

    Position 4: It was the moves 2 e6+ and 2 e5 that I struggled with for a long time. Eventually I saw a mate in 17. Stockfish tought that I had a faster way to do it in just 13 moves.

  • @rektrainmeme5808
    @rektrainmeme5808 Před 2 lety

    that last puzzle was really really gangster. I spent like 5 minutes looking for the mate then you said what moves does black have, and ill be damned black has literally no moves

  • @elamir7601
    @elamir7601 Před 2 lety

    This is amazing and helpful video

  • @SuperFerz
    @SuperFerz Před rokem

    A puzzle from the Russian '64' magazine which is similar in vein to Troitzky's:
    1Bk5/p2pK3/8/8/8/8/8/5B2 w - - 0 1
    And a puzzle from a Russian textbook (I forget the original author) maybe a simplified situation from Cordes?
    8/8/6p1/B6p/7k/7P/2q3PK/8 b - - 0 1

  • @FloydMaxwell
    @FloydMaxwell Před 2 lety +1

    Position 4 - white can even taunt black (when bishop is still on h6) by moving bishop to f8, then back to h6, then to f8, then to h6, then finally to g7.

    • @Tempergaming69
      @Tempergaming69 Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah right so you can make an escape square for the black king When he moves pawn on h7.
      Hahaha That's why being arrogant is not an option when playing chess, Just finish the game quickly and have sportsmanship.
      PS: Not hating but a great idea hahaha I also Love punishing enemies who don't resign :P

  • @amritroy3495
    @amritroy3495 Před 2 lety

    Nice Bishop puzzles

  • @alwaysinout
    @alwaysinout Před 2 lety

    Amazing tactics

  • @willemm9356
    @willemm9356 Před 2 lety +1

    That first position is really weird. Basically, the knight is in the way of the bishop, so you move it out of the way while keeping tempo.

  • @alyvav.trauma2440
    @alyvav.trauma2440 Před rokem +1

    11:05 You forgot to explain the outcome when Black would play Pawn g5 to g4 instead of capturing the Knight with the Queen.

  • @spindoctor6385
    @spindoctor6385 Před 2 lety +1

    Position 5 there is no bishop mate after black plays Qg1+, only move for white Kxg1 black then plays g4. This gives the black king an "escape" square on g5. It will still result in a win for white but only by creating a queen and would take another 10+ moves.
    Edit: All of the above is after Bc7 Qxf2 Kh2

    • @cookit4831
      @cookit4831 Před rokem +1

      The last position isn’t a force mate if black instead of getting knight after bishop c7 you move pawn to g4, because now if you try to mate with bishop the black king can move to g3 because the white king is no covering the g3 square and if instead of check with bishop you do the move to block g3 you advance the pawn delivering a check and you have to move your king because if bishop takes queen takes with check and you win queen over knight and if knight takes you take with pawn and you are not blocked by your pawns anymore and if knight e4 you just can eat with queen because the original position of queen was e3 and leaving free the g3 square.
      Edit: this is a better way and you don’t loose your queen too

    • @spindoctor6385
      @spindoctor6385 Před rokem

      @@cookit4831 Very nice, much better than my solution, I don't see a way white can win at all after that. It seems whites best option after black plays g4 in your line is to force a draw just repeating
      Bd8 Kg3, Bc7 Kh4,
      Bd8 Kg3, Bc7 Kh4 etc.

    • @cookit4831
      @cookit4831 Před rokem +1

      @@spindoctor6385 It doesn't become a draw too because when Bishop d8 check on black king then the forced move Kg3 if bishop moves c7 again to try to make a draw you, take the knight with your king and now you threat mate in 2, Qe1 check and Qg1 mate because black king is covering g3 square so best move for white is Kh2 instead of doing any other move before the check with Queen because with that Q to g3 bishop just simple takes and now Qe1 is impossible because if you move Qe1, white does bishop g3 check and when you move bishop takes queen and white is in better position because when you take the bishop white just simple advance the other pawn and get a queen so here you just have to take the Pawn in b3 square instead of going Qe1 and Qc1 and you keep doing the threat of Qg3 mate in 2and if instead of bishop c7 (when bishop delivered the check moving to d8) white plays Pxg4, instead of taking knight with king you take it with the queen doing a threat of mate making that the bishop has to deliver a check to black and you just simple take the pawn with your king and keep the advantage, so this has to be more black to play and win than white to play and win because bishop c7 isn't winning you actually loose the game with that move as white, and if instead of doing bishop d8 white does pawn to g2 delivering check you just retreat and escape from there and if knight g4 you just deliver check with queen winning tempo and black now does Pxh3 mate in 1 unstoppable. (knight to e3 gets you in disadvantage)

    • @spindoctor6385
      @spindoctor6385 Před rokem

      @@cookit4831 Ah, I had the king set up on on my board on g1... My bad.

    • @cookit4831
      @cookit4831 Před rokem

      @@spindoctor6385 don’t worry it actually took me some time to look at all this moves, and I’m like 850

  • @Markyto973
    @Markyto973 Před 2 lety

    That was amazing

  • @fastgeography1251
    @fastgeography1251 Před rokem

    Very nice puzzles

  • @mr._baum153
    @mr._baum153 Před rokem

    These are great but pretty easy puzzles!

  • @bobshelton37
    @bobshelton37 Před rokem

    In the last game after queen takes the knight black could play queen to g1 forcing kxq. Black can then play p-g4 giving the king an escape route. Will still be a white victory but gets out of the immediate problem.

  • @williamsease584
    @williamsease584 Před 2 lety

    5:53 I was thinking check mate in 3 with the Bishop utilising the queen to f6. There wood be noway for black to stop the check with the queen on f7 without getting mated. Then checkmate with Bishop on f6

    • @adamhowden9863
      @adamhowden9863 Před 2 lety +2

      e1=Q+ and your king cannot maintain contact with f7 or f8 so black is winning with either Qe8 or Rf8 preventing any further checks

  • @muhammadumarfarooq7722

    Position 1 nd 5 simply mind blowing

  • @MrWeenuk21
    @MrWeenuk21 Před 2 lety

    its not the hardest puzzle but it felt good seeing it and making out the solution in 4 seconds.

  • @imi___
    @imi___ Před rokem

    hm.. 2:27 .. nice, but I believe, queen to d4 would also work, right?
    If king g8, then queen d8 and after king goes back to f8 checkmate. If instead the queen goes to e5, it simply gets captured and then the king has to move to backrank, then queen to b8 and finally f8. If the queen intersects at f6, then it gets captured by the bishop and after king to any backrank, the queen mates with d8.
    If at any time the king goes to h6, then its the bishop to f8 (or g7) and its mate too.

  • @Vs-fo3gh
    @Vs-fo3gh Před 2 měsíci

    Position 3 black can also do rook b8 than b7 to block check but next turn check mate

  • @borhex
    @borhex Před rokem

    The first one happened to me @900 and it was amazing! Only difference is I had a Knight and a pawn guarding the 5th

  • @nighthawk984
    @nighthawk984 Před 2 lety +8

    As I rise and fall below the the 500 level I am finding my 500 and 600 rated opponents checkmating me with their bishops more so than the lower rated opponents. Thus, this is valuable to me - thanks Nelson.

    • @kidthebilly7766
      @kidthebilly7766 Před 2 lety +4

      if you are struggling at the 500 level i recommend finding videos that explore more broad concepts and ideas as you will rarely be employing bishop checkmates. find videos with core chess principles and concepts

    • @nighthawk984
      @nighthawk984 Před 2 lety

      @@kidthebilly7766 Thanks for the advice. When I started playing chess more regularly I was rated at below 300 and kept on getting checkmated in a very few moves, discovered on-line through videos (Chess Vibes etc.) the scholar's mate and learned the defense. As I am now playing higher rated players with more tactical ability I am finding they are using the whole board to attack with bishops as one example - the knowledge I have gained from Nelson's video is more defensive than offensive.

  • @cookit4831
    @cookit4831 Před rokem

    The last position isn’t a force mate if black instead of getting knight after bishop c7 you move pawn to g4, because now if you try to mate with bishop the black king can move to g3 because the white king is no covering the g3 square and if instead of check with bishop you do the move to block g3 you advance the pawn delivering a check and you have to move your king because if bishop takes queen takes woth check and you win queen over bishop and if knight takes you take with pawn and you are not blocked by your pawns anymore and if knight e4 you just can eat with queen because the original position of queen was e3 and leaving free the g3 square.

  • @sunnychow2518
    @sunnychow2518 Před rokem

    position 5: Q to G1 check? white king has to capture and pawn from G5 can move?

  • @shrochrome
    @shrochrome Před 2 lety

    I have a question about game 3, how about black just play rook to g8 ? Won't it can block the check the next turn ?

  • @darklordtheslayer9564
    @darklordtheslayer9564 Před 2 lety

    It was fun and eazy to solve it

  • @michaelmappin1830
    @michaelmappin1830 Před 2 lety

    Ty

  • @QuentinStephens
    @QuentinStephens Před rokem

    That last position, can Black escape by playing Qg1+ ? After Kxg1 Black can play g4 and Bd8 is no longer mate: Black can play Kg3 and get a perpetual check from White or escape. (I see earlier comments have pointed out this move but no one has actually resolved it.)

  • @You-hp3rl
    @You-hp3rl Před rokem

    In position 4 after Bh6+ Kg8, g7 Kf7, what If I just move the king in e5, black king can't really move or I just promote to queen and win, he will have to push the pawn, which I ll eventually capture and then he will hav eot move the king, i will promote and then win, I know the point of this video was to find single bishop checkmate, but in the end of the day once I promote I can easily win anyway

  • @_Matchu
    @_Matchu Před 2 lety

    great video

  • @jamesdriscoll4125
    @jamesdriscoll4125 Před 2 lety

    Position 5: kd3, sacrificed by qd3, then be1 mate (yet requires queen to take knight.)

    • @adamhowden9863
      @adamhowden9863 Před 2 lety

      I liked that move but it allows g4 and escape behind the pawns. If bd8+ king escapes by g3.
      Btw for a knight move we use N, K is for king

  • @null5573
    @null5573 Před 2 lety

    3/5
    Last one is just wow

  • @hcgreier6037
    @hcgreier6037 Před rokem

    Great puzzles, like them! I knew the one from Troitzky, bud didn't know the other four...
    BTW the german "Zugzwang" ist spoken like *tsoogtswung*, with both "g"s beeing a "g" like in "goat", and not "dsh" 😂

  • @IlluminatiM06
    @IlluminatiM06 Před 2 lety +1

    Why you didn't analyse the Morphy game where he checkmates with a single bishop. That is the most popular single bishop checkmate game but you didn't saw us.

  • @salemtv5808
    @salemtv5808 Před 2 lety +1

    that was amazing thank you so much 😊 my real problem is visualization any idea how to enhance that??

    • @TK5280.
      @TK5280. Před 2 lety

      Great question! Wish I knew the answer lol but for what it’s worth… Daily tactic puzzles and thorough game analyses each game has helped me a lot with recognition and improved visualization. Best of luck to ya!!

    • @Kiwiiizzz
      @Kiwiiizzz Před 2 lety

      Repetition and your memory will improve simple

  • @ihaveshellytricks6934
    @ihaveshellytricks6934 Před 2 lety

    in the final puzzle, what if black just played c4?

  • @novilunium5339
    @novilunium5339 Před 2 lety

    On H. Cordes, what if black plays pawn to g4?

  • @fatenj.m909
    @fatenj.m909 Před rokem

    Sorry to say this but in the fourth position their is a flaw because at some point in the puzzle the black king is on g8 the white king is on d5 the white pawn is on g7 the white bishop is on h6 the black pawn on h7 and the other pawn is on e7 they could push the e pawn to e6 and draw the game

  • @jerrydavidflusche9396
    @jerrydavidflusche9396 Před 2 lety

    On puzzle 5, after white bishop to C7, can't black win with pawn to G4?

  • @tiemen9095
    @tiemen9095 Před 2 lety +1

    8:05 Black can just play e6+ right? If we take it is stalemate, black can keep walking his pawn, if we take the pawn black can just hug the queening square with his king because if our king approaches it is always a stalemate...

    • @corasolagalar
      @corasolagalar Před 2 lety +1

      White isn't forced to take, instead play Kd6 and if black tries to just march the pawn up the board it goes Kd6 e5 Ke7 e4 Kf6 e3 and now that our king is defending the g7 pawn we can play Bxe3 and the bishop unblocks blacks h pawn so it's not stalemate and after black pushes the h pawn and we eventually take it with the bishop they will be forced to leave the g8 square and we can promote our pawn. If instead after Kd6 black plays Kf7 we block the pawn with Ke5 forcing Kg8 since every other legal move allows white to promote, and then we are able to go Kf6 and then after e5 Ke7 it's the same position as the first variation

    • @tiemen9095
      @tiemen9095 Před 2 lety +1

      @@corasolagalar In my mind it went e6 Kd6, Kf7 Ke5, Kg8 Kf6... but from there on I agree that it is the same again as you say ;). I see now that white should be able to win it, like you pointed out!

  • @thatonegamer5937
    @thatonegamer5937 Před 2 lety

    What about queen g 1 check king takes and then pawn g 4?

  • @thelosts9940
    @thelosts9940 Před 2 lety

    What about g4 first move in the last position bc the move you played for black was a random move. _.

  • @Hamrish862
    @Hamrish862 Před rokem

    I have a doubt on position 4. That is what If the first move is bishop to g5 ?

  • @hchdfgxhxgchxyfchvh4086

    For puzzle 2 could you also have done en passant?

  • @brucewillards37
    @brucewillards37 Před 2 lety

    6:01 In position 3, does Qf6 work? Im pretty sure it's a mate in 3, while less stylish.

  • @MabookaMabooka
    @MabookaMabooka Před 2 lety

    After @10:20 Bc7, Qg3; Bg3+, Kg3+, and now it's questionable. Say, Kg1 Kf3, now it depends :)

  • @Thieves_real
    @Thieves_real Před 7 měsíci

    1st one was fun i was able to solve it but it took like 20 sec

  • @oldschool1993
    @oldschool1993 Před 2 lety

    The bishop mate reminds of an incident many decades ago. I had been a fair player in High school and was #1 board. A few years after graduation I went to a local chess tournament and watched some guys. There was one guy who was really good and I figured I had little chance of beating him. So I came to the board and acted like an idiot- moving pieces in no coherent fashion and losing pawns without care(I even referred to them as ten cent prawns). I sacrificed my rook and queen, with only one channel in mind, and when he got so overconfident I moved one (prawn) which opened the channel for my bishop and mated him. The guy was in total shock and actually started crying.

    • @justaguy4311
      @justaguy4311 Před rokem

      I'll take shit that didn't happen for 500 alex

    • @oldschool1993
      @oldschool1993 Před rokem

      @@justaguy4311 My guess is you have been taking it for free all your life.

  • @judithcabanero
    @judithcabanero Před 2 lety

    In position 4 can't black timeout and draw??

  • @santhoshpanthalarajan4747

    What about knight d3 in last puzzle🤔

  • @giotcg7
    @giotcg7 Před rokem

    8:25 actually there are two winning moves for white: g8=Q and the amazing...
    g8=B!!
    Just pure humiliation

  • @brubie7584
    @brubie7584 Před 2 lety

    Oh man that first puzzle managed to find, that is a disgusting mate

  • @superstardevansh3086
    @superstardevansh3086 Před 2 lety +1

    why you do not play h6 in 5 position?

  • @frankiekimber3973
    @frankiekimber3973 Před měsícem

    The first mate was beautiful

  • @krishradio1
    @krishradio1 Před 2 lety

    Great theme. Why don’t you do some more themed videos like this…

  • @TuberTugger
    @TuberTugger Před 2 lety

    Something you didn't explore in the last puzzle is: What if black doesn't take the free knight with the queen?
    I know it isn't a good end game for black but it escapes the immediate mate threat. Like maybe queen to g3. Bishop takes, king takes. White is up a knight into the endgame, definitely bad. But much better than losing on the spot.

    • @simondewitt7161
      @simondewitt7161 Před 2 lety

      Thats why the puzzle states White to play and win, not checkmate.
      Plus any player rated over 200 will just use the knight to take the c pawn, queen their b pawn and checkmate you slowly.
      Id much rather lose quick to some amazing combination than a slow simple drawn out death.

    • @TuberTugger
      @TuberTugger Před 2 lety

      ​@@simondewitt7161 The point of a puzzle is for the opposite side to play optimally. WTF are you talking about. You aren't playing black. Why does your proclivity towards "cool combinations" mean anything?
      The engine always prefers slow loses over immediate ones. That's chess 101.
      Clearly Simon, you are a troll. Easy block.

    • @simondewitt7161
      @simondewitt7161 Před 2 lety

      He highlights the pretty incredible checkmate threat that exists.
      It is assumed that white would easily win this end game up a knight. Not sure why anyone needs that situation explored. I explored it for you, Knight takes C Pawn, white wins game, either with Blacks King chasing down the B pawn while White captures the remaining Black King side pawns or by Black simply letting the B pawn Queen.
      And I'm not sure why you would rather waste your time and play on in a dead lost end game shuffling your king around. A computer will because it doesn't care.

  • @MrYoav1813
    @MrYoav1813 Před rokem

    Bad owai, in position 3 you can see that 5 of black's pawon it's somthing (probobly)

  • @msjoanofthearc
    @msjoanofthearc Před rokem

    I truly enjoy the puzzles, plus your delivery in presenting the moves is brilliant!

  • @mysteryGuySaysHi
    @mysteryGuySaysHi Před rokem

    Last puzzle: Position > Pieces

  • @marvintrimmel2005
    @marvintrimmel2005 Před 2 lety

    13:57 what if Queen just takes the pawn, forcing white into check and takin the queen. Black can then play his pawn from g5 to g4. So there's no check mate for white to play anymore. Ofc black has a disadvantage bc white has better placed pawns and a bishop. Bit at least its not a bishop mate

  • @mohammadayubkhan999
    @mohammadayubkhan999 Před rokem

    I figured out position4 and 5 I'm making progress

  • @imi___
    @imi___ Před rokem

    12:07 queen to g1.. why is that not good? sure, the king takes but then he is no longer defending g3, so black can do move the pawn from g5 to g4 and if then the bishop tries d8, we have king g3 and the king escapes. Looks like pretty much a draw to me.

  • @loganstevens3788
    @loganstevens3788 Před 2 lety

    i’m a low rated player and all but wouldn’t bishop F6, king takes F8, queen b8 mate? for the first one^

  • @paataberidze2030
    @paataberidze2030 Před 2 lety

    Dude, you have to see that one, which tal solved...

  • @dylanduchesne7692
    @dylanduchesne7692 Před 2 lety

    Position 5 is crazy

  • @erinblack2186
    @erinblack2186 Před 2 lety

    🔥🔥🔥

  • @SS-sc4qj
    @SS-sc4qj Před rokem

    Position 5 black goes Qg1 sacrifices queen and survives

  • @barondls8134
    @barondls8134 Před 2 lety

    I could figure out all the puzzle in seconds😎, but not in my match 😆

  • @jeff1910
    @jeff1910 Před 11 měsíci

    Super

  • @Zanodia
    @Zanodia Před 2 lety

    I think that I found a few more ways to win position 1.

  • @stevejohn7459
    @stevejohn7459 Před rokem +1

    Queen to d4? It’s a fork! (Free rook!)

  • @erinblack2186
    @erinblack2186 Před 2 lety +1

    👍👍👍

  • @sasthanatarajan4760
    @sasthanatarajan4760 Před 2 lety

    Nice