How Is This Mate In 1? ♖ Tough Chess LOGIC Puzzle ♖ Chess Logic Puzzle

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  • čas přidán 22. 07. 2022
  • #Chess #ChessPuzzles #LogicPuzzles #ChessforCharity #helenkellerinternational #Puzzles #Logic #retrograde
    In this video, I show a mate in 1 chess puzzle that is much harder than it appears! Try to consider ALL of the possible options before checking out the solution. Be sure to subscribe for more chess content!
    FEN - rk2K3/NPR5/8/8/1Q6/8/8/8 b - - 0 1
    Thank you!
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Komentáře • 1,8K

  • @gresach
    @gresach Před rokem +986

    Great explanation. Flipping the player to move when there's no legal retraction is kind of the "official chess joke". It appears as Article 15 of the Problem Codex. This is one of the best of 100s of instances of this funny idea. But I would really appreciate, Frank, if you can highlight the composer's name right up front in your screen: you have plenty of space to left or right of the board. There is no IP associated with chess problems, but it's part of the problem culture to always give the composer's name when quoting a problem. This also gives a sense of history which is part of the aesthetic. Please. In this case it's Walter Freiherr von Holzhausen (Akademisches Monatsheft für Schach 1901).

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem +124

      Thanks for the feedback! I am totally on board with that (pun intended). I like to credit the composer in the description (if I know them), but I think the screen would be a bit better because I want their effort and work to be recognized. After all, these puzzles are incredible and I just want to show them to spread the beautiful game of chess. 🙂

    • @rogerkearns8094
      @rogerkearns8094 Před rokem +9

      @@ChessforCharity
      _the screen would be a bit better_
      Very much better, I'd say. ;)
      Great video, thank you.

    • @shirleyherda150
      @shirleyherda150 Před rokem +1

      7k

    • @saaah707
      @saaah707 Před rokem +3

      there's something so cool about the idea that this puzzle was crafted over a century ago

    • @topneorej
      @topneorej Před rokem +1

      Still, it should be WHITE gives mate in one.

  • @Irapedalotofpeople
    @Irapedalotofpeople Před rokem +2397

    "Mate in one is a term used to describe a position on a chessboard that allows the PLAYER TO MOVE to give checkmate in one move without any previous forced checks or forced moves."

    • @klevialushi571
      @klevialushi571 Před rokem +114

      Correct!

    • @Termenz1
      @Termenz1 Před rokem +24

      Верно

    • @jaakezzz_G
      @jaakezzz_G Před rokem +442

      Exactly. I found it funny when he said: try it with your friends they might think there’s a mistake in the puzzle.
      Oh gee i wonder why, because there is 🤪

    • @topneorej
      @topneorej Před rokem

      The mistake he makes is, he should say WHITE gives mate in one. Not completely correct, but much better, since it can't be white's move, it has to be one move for black and THEN mate in one.

    • @garronviviano6601
      @garronviviano6601 Před rokem +75

      yea this guy doesn’t know what he’s talking about lol

  • @Wulfy013
    @Wulfy013 Před rokem +1196

    Gonna be honest:
    Logically deducing it is black's move is kind of nonsensical as impossible positions appear in puzzles with some frequency.

    • @levborisov8590
      @levborisov8590 Před rokem +41

      Most puzzle positions are contrived rather than impossible. There is however a genre of problems where previous history of positions has to be deduced in order to be able to solve the puzzle. The typical one is arguing that you can take en passant due to a unique prior move by the opponent.

    • @Jivvi
      @Jivvi Před rokem +26

      @@levborisov8590 Those still have the correct player to move according to how the puzzle is worded. Puzzles where you have to deduce whose move it is are a whole different variety of retrograde puzzles. This one is pretending not not to be one of those when it is. It should be written more like "Prove which side has the move, and find mate in 1 for the other side."

    • @hihunter7
      @hihunter7 Před rokem +19

      That's exactly what I was thinking. Plus mate in one implies that it was the current move to mate. I wasted my time on this:(

    • @escapedlunatic27
      @escapedlunatic27 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Only in particular puzzles which are designed to be unusual in some respect. In all standard mate in X problems or win/draw studies, the convention is that the starting position has to be legal.

    • @AlexanderVRadev
      @AlexanderVRadev Před 7 měsíci +9

      Yeah also when you realize white can't do it in 30 seconds the logical thing is to go "Ok can black do it?" and realize they can't in another 10 seconds. You don't need the logical mumbojumbo he is using. This is the reason why puzzles like that piss me off sometimes - Tell people who's move it is and what direction on the board are pawns moving.

  • @RGC_animation
    @RGC_animation Před rokem +952

    When you said it's Black to move, I was like: Wait, how in the world can Black checkmate White in 1 move?

    • @FGA-47
      @FGA-47 Před rokem +2

      😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @gravyholicbear
      @gravyholicbear Před rokem +141

      My thoughts exactly. Hence the title is click bait.

    • @ayanmujawar3475
      @ayanmujawar3475 Před rokem +1

      I also had the same thought 💀

    • @kotelnikovmikail
      @kotelnikovmikail Před rokem +13

      The thesis statement of the puzzle is a scam. The fastest way to mate black requires 2 moves. The explanation can be found in the chess notation of the puzzle solution (assuming the first move in the puzzle as move 1 and that the original score was 0-0):
      1. ... black_move (1. ... black_move+)
      2. white_move#
      1-0

    • @dob2664
      @dob2664 Před 11 měsíci +11

      @@kotelnikovmikail wrong. chess is played 1 move at a time. each player gets a turn. for example, a game may start with:
      1. e4 e5
      Notice how blacks move e5 is not 2? It is 1 move. Hence, you are wrong. It would go:
      1. black_move white_move#
      ONE MOVE

  • @PvblivsAelivs
    @PvblivsAelivs Před rokem +439

    Well, yes, when you say "find the mate-in-one," the person is going to assume that the player whose move it is can deliver checkmate on that move.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem +27

      Correct, and this puzzle is cool (to me) because if one proceeds with that assumption, they realize that it isn’t not possible for it to be white’s move. It is all fun stuff! Thanks for watching! 🙂

    • @MonsieurRob
      @MonsieurRob Před rokem +107

      @@ChessforCharity From that position neither black nor white have "checkmates in one" Id just be a bit pissed because what you are asking is formulated incorrectly just for the joke.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem +16

      Yeah, I see that point, but I would argue that white does have mate in 1, but they are just waiting for black to make their move. I was trying to make is less of a “trick” and more of a logic puzzle. Thanks for the feedback! 🙂

    • @eifbkcn
      @eifbkcn Před rokem +20

      @@MonsieurRob It's all about conventions. Chess Problems have somewhat different rules from Chess Games, such as the a posteriori and retro strategy conventions. The idea that white is always the one to deliver mate is a fundamental rule of chess problems, and thence the convention that black still moves first if white is the proven last move is an obscure rule, but nonetheless one that definitely exists in the codex. It is not a joke or cheap trick; it is literally in the rules for chess problems, whether you like it or not, and there are hundreds of compositions that use the same theme.

    • @jaybingham3711
      @jaybingham3711 Před rokem +10

      @@eifbkcn Agree. That said, the problem makes use (plays off) of the default standard for tactics training (including Mate in X problems) where you are always initiating the move...whether the first (white) or last half (black) of one full game move. The "trick" here lies in ignoring that reality. Black's move closes out game move N. White then makes use of N+1 to deliver mate. N does not equal N+1.

  • @s4ad0wpi
    @s4ad0wpi Před rokem +699

    1. While technically true by Chess terminology, I feel like anyone who hears "Mate in 1" will be thinking that the active player will be the one to mate. Saying "Oh, Black moves, but then WHITE Mates" is kinda cheating.
    2. This also reminds me of an older Puzzle that requires a DIFFERENT Outside the Box thinking solution, where you use white to capture and promote to a BLACK Knight. Now, that puzzle doesn't work any more due to a rules change, but with some tricky wording, you can still use it for a sneaky puzzle!

    • @karelspinka3031
      @karelspinka3031 Před rokem +26

      I saw once a puzzle where the only way to checkmate in 2 was to "overpromote" your pawn to opponent's King, they would have only 1 legal move and then you could checkmate both Kings at once.

    • @xCorvus7x
      @xCorvus7x Před rokem +27

      Wtf? It seems chess was a lot more fun before this rule change.

    • @jaideepshekhar4621
      @jaideepshekhar4621 Před rokem +10

      I won't exactly call it cheating, but it is tricky, like he said. I think the point is to realise there IS no M1 for white, analyse the position, and THEN realise its black's turn. Amazing puzzle!

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem +37

      @@jaideepshekhar4621 Yep, that is what I was going for. I was not trying to clickbait or 'cheat' anyone. I just wanted to present a tricky logic puzzle. :)

    • @robescalante6352
      @robescalante6352 Před rokem +1

      But the knight can block the check with ....Nb6! Or Black can play then even better...Kxc7. The solution is the only correct one.

  • @jdubs__01
    @jdubs__01 Před rokem +210

    I'm so proud of myself for seeing the move order tbh.
    I was like: "theres no way black could have gotten there unless white moved la.... wait"

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem +23

      Nice work! I am glad you were able to figure it out! 🙂

    • @lazyass941
      @lazyass941 Před rokem +1

      me too actually figured it out took a couple minutes

    • @no_one151
      @no_one151 Před 10 měsíci

      There are many puzzles where white has to make the first move in order to not stalemate black

    • @thorham1346
      @thorham1346 Před 4 měsíci

      @@ChessforCharity It's not relevant. Chess puzzle positions don't have to be reachable positions.

    • @yc6683
      @yc6683 Před měsícem

      Wrong. There's no way black's king could've gotten there if white previously moved. Black's king would've been on c8 and the pawn on b7 would've had to be moved from b6 to check the king but the rook was on c7 checking the king.

  • @NexusOfChaos
    @NexusOfChaos Před rokem +234

    i was thinking *literally* outside the box, as if there was some move i could make *off of the board* that was mate in 1

    • @frinpi7473
      @frinpi7473 Před rokem

      get a gun and kill your opponent, brilliant checkmate

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem +23

      I like that you were starting to go down that path! Thanks for watching!

    • @RinRin72769
      @RinRin72769 Před rokem

      use a gun and shoot the opponent

    • @danielsmerdel8214
      @danielsmerdel8214 Před rokem +5

      There is a different illegal move that would result in mate in 1 if it were white to move. Pawn captures c8 promote to rook/queen. There's nothing on c8 to capture, ofc, but it would result in mate

    • @Itz_Sophia19
      @Itz_Sophia19 Před rokem +5

      I was thinking about an illegal move for white, qxb7. it is illegal because pawn is white. But I think there's an actual chess variant where you can capture your own pieces

  • @Shaeffen_
    @Shaeffen_ Před 8 měsíci +31

    "Acshually, it was blacks move the entire time even though I said it was mate in 1 ☝️🤓"

    • @yoseftreitman7226
      @yoseftreitman7226 Před 3 měsíci +10

      If you were to plug this position into stockfish and say "black to move, what is the evaluation?" it would say "M1 for white".

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 2 měsíci +3

      Yeah, that is the *logic* part of the puzzle. The fact that one can figure out that black is to move by simply studying the board is pretty cool (to me, at least). Thank you for watching!

    • @Eye-vp5de
      @Eye-vp5de Před 2 měsíci +1

      ​@@ChessforCharitythat's a wonderful puzzle
      (The catch is, I never said that I'm speaking a proper English. In fact I'm speaking a dialect, in which "wonderful" means "terrible".)

  • @dajanacoric5495
    @dajanacoric5495 Před rokem +27

    You said to think outside the box..so i assumed it was a chess game with ability to capture your own pieces so i just took white pawn with the queen

  • @sukotsutoCSSR
    @sukotsutoCSSR Před rokem +34

    I thought it was black's turn at first since I intuitively thought that position is a little odd. As a beginner level, it feels nice that I actually got that right. Now to translate this knowledge to reverse my losing streak ..

  • @Popikawaii
    @Popikawaii Před rokem +14

    THis puzzle is like -
    How do you drive from London to Paris in 1 hour?
    Answer: You take a plane, because you can't drive there in 1 hour, and you have to understand that you can't drive there in 1 hour to solve the puzzle. How cool is that?

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem

      That isn’t comparable at all in my opinion. You can logically deduce that it is black to move in this position. To me, that is the part that is super important. Sorry you didn’t enjoy it, but check out some of my other videos.

    • @Popikawaii
      @Popikawaii Před rokem +6

      @@ChessforCharity You can also logically deduce that you can't drive to Paris in 1 hour.

    • @SappinYourSentries
      @SappinYourSentries Před rokem +3

      @@ChessforCharity I will not check out your other videos, because this one feels intellectually dishonest. Why would I want educational content from someone like that?

  • @ElPanaCanta
    @ElPanaCanta Před rokem +26

    B8 knight is just an amazing move. Blocking the check while allowing the discovered check by the rook and also preventing the king from escaping to a6, just beautiful.

  • @gilbertjizz4811
    @gilbertjizz4811 Před rokem +8

    Technically, it is not mate in one, as the turns ends with black's move. The moves in chess are defined as follows:
    Move 1:
    {White move} {Black Move}/{Checkmate}
    Move 2:
    {White move} {Black Move}/{Checkmate}
    If its black to play, the turn ends, so it is not mate in 1 move, as a new move starts after black moves. So there is a mistake in the puzzle.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 2 měsíci

      It is unconventional counting for sure, but 1/2 move + 1/2 move is 1 full move. I would say it is a bit 'out of the box'.

    • @whisperwalkful
      @whisperwalkful Před 2 měsíci +1

      ​its not out of the box, its just wrong.

    • @HustenbonbonTV
      @HustenbonbonTV Před 26 dny

      ​@@whisperwalkful Ask a Engine and it will say Mate in 1

  • @hfa.almeida
    @hfa.almeida Před rokem +42

    This is like puzzling... "How is the murder..." and then... the puzzle owner "Haha, it's suicide...".
    Probably too much miss-direction to even find it puzzleish.
    There are some people that enjoy finding lightbulbs in dark rooms...

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem +2

      Yeah, it is a different type of puzzle. To use your analogy, this puzzle is like finding a person dead and trying to figure out whether it is a murder or a suicide. Happily, with logic, we are able to figure out this one. Thanks for watching!

    • @byebye2232
      @byebye2232 Před rokem +9

      @@ChessforCharity Think even more out of the box. Pull out a hammer and smash the board to force ur opponent to surrender. Is it much better? Thx for reading my comment!

    • @Malefic_Roar
      @Malefic_Roar Před rokem +1

      ​@@ChessforCharity i wasted 7 minutes of my life

    • @SappinYourSentries
      @SappinYourSentries Před rokem +2

      @@ChessforCharity No. It is not. We are explicitly told something(mate in one position, or “it is murder”), which ends up being categorically incorrect.

  • @shade0mirth
    @shade0mirth Před rokem +6

    Actually figured it out backwards. I had a hunch that it was a knight promotion, and then I realized that it works if it is black's move. Good puzzle 👍

  • @goosehead345
    @goosehead345 Před rokem +38

    this puzzle is really amazing because it is so rare to promote to a knight and give checkmate in the same move

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem +8

      I agree! It is even crazier that an underpromotion can lead to mate in two different ways! Thank you for watching! 🙂

    • @rolandkarlsson7072
      @rolandkarlsson7072 Před 2 měsíci

      Nope, it is quite common in chess puzzles to promote to knight instead of queen.

  • @kotelnikovmikail
    @kotelnikovmikail Před rokem +16

    There's no mate in 1, the puzzle is formulated wrong. I also tested this position on stockfish, it says there is no mate in 1, only mate in 2. This is because 1 move can only be made by white first, and black always makes the move afterwards. You cannot do it in the other direction. If black moves, white's move is considered as the next move.
    Here's an example. From the position in the puzzle, assuming that the score is 0-0:
    1. ... black_move
    2. white_move#
    1-0

  • @GamingForeverEpic
    @GamingForeverEpic Před 25 dny +2

    As much as I want to love this puzzle, I think being intentionally misleading and getting berated for it shouldn’t be surprise. You can’t pie someone in the face and then when they get mad you explain the joke and give them compensation and expect them to not hold it against you. You were obviously fishing for people to get confused, so don’t be surprised when they don’t like the result. Most people go into chess logic puzzles assuming it’s more basic and a simple test of their knowledge, misleading people like this brings them out of their comfort zone so they obviously won’t always like it.

  • @Mr152008
    @Mr152008 Před rokem +8

    Nice try but I've seen puzzles with this trick before😎 Also minor point, at 2:08 Qb7# is technically an alternative mate. I do think you could have shown a few moves in an example line showing how this position could be achieved but it was still a fun exercise 👍

  • @xeviusUsagi
    @xeviusUsagi Před rokem +8

    "think outside of the box"
    Me: "oooh I see! The pawn can move diagonally without having to eat, so It moves to the right, promotes to queen and its checkmate!"
    "its black turn, and if it does this move its check in one"
    Me: "Yeah, I'm sort of a chess master my self"

    • @newaccount4932
      @newaccount4932 Před rokem

      Actually if black makes any more it loses during white's next move.

  • @paper2222
    @paper2222 Před rokem +5

    this is a puzzle that's rather "mate in 1, but mate yourself"

  • @chessandmathguy
    @chessandmathguy Před rokem +4

    Very nice puzzle and I enjoyed it, but of course it's misleading.
    A "mate in one" puzzle is a position where the person whose turn it is delivers mate on the move.

  • @rogergeyer9851
    @rogergeyer9851 Před 8 měsíci +6

    I'm not crazy about this. Mate in 1 implies it's white to move and mate in 1.
    There was a nice puzzle re out of the box thinking in "The Soviet Chess Primer", where there's a mate in one that looks impossible. Then you have to use your imagination and think outside the box, re, HOW COULD it be mate in 1. At that point, you can imagine a pawn configuration where taking en passant capturing is possible, allowing the mate.
    But that didn't violate the rule of how mate puzzles are stated, re it WAS the winning side to MOVE AND MATE.
    "Logic Puzzles" are FINE, but shouldn't trample all over convention to use a "trick" to make a word game "possible" in chess, IMO.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 2 měsíci

      I appreciate the feedback. Thanks for sharing and for watching.

  • @ceejay0137
    @ceejay0137 Před rokem +28

    That's a really cool puzzle. I managed to solve it myself using the same logic you showed in the video, although it took me a lot longer! Once I finally realised it had to be black's move the rest was not too hard.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem

      I am glad you figured it out! Nice job persisting for the solution! ⭐️

    • @andrewkandasamy
      @andrewkandasamy Před rokem +1

      I mean it's a cool puzzle. But the title is misleading since it's not actually what the puzzle is asking. The actual answer is that it's not a mate in 1. The puzzle title is worded, it's saying "There's mate in 1. How do you do it?" And... you can't. You can't win in one move.
      Even if you made the argument that black and white each moving a piece counts as a single chess turn, that logic still doesn't work in this case since moving from black to move to white to move would cause the chess game to move on to the next turn.
      And regardless, the starting position cannot be considered a mate in 1 until the turn player can mate.

    • @nou1186
      @nou1186 Před 7 měsíci

      @@andrewkandasamy That’s incorrect. White can mate within one move, so it counts as mate in one. You’re thinking “mate on the same move, numbered from move 1,” but the starting order doesn’t actually matter because the puzzle doesn’t start from the beginning of the game. Plug this position into an analysis board with black to move and it’ll be evaluated as mate in 1.

  • @michaeltellurian825
    @michaeltellurian825 Před rokem +11

    So in other words, you didn't give the position where there was a mate in one, you gave the position prior to a mate in one. It's not clever, it's deceptive, and hence you've lost our trust in addition to losing me as a subscriber.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem

      Sorry you feel that way. I think it is cleaver because there is a logical deduction necessary to know that it is black to move. It is about the logic, not about being deceptive. Hopefully one day I can gain your subscription back. Thanks for watching.

    • @SappinYourSentries
      @SappinYourSentries Před rokem +1

      @@ChessforCharity you will never gain me as a subscriber because I will never watch another of your videos. Cheers.

    • @karl130645
      @karl130645 Před 6 měsíci

      Bruh

  • @javel6789
    @javel6789 Před rokem +1

    I don't usually solve these but I figured this one out in just a few minutes. For an online rating of 1000 Im quite happy.

  • @mence5992
    @mence5992 Před rokem +2

    Lol I wasted 10 minutes questioning my chess skills. I was Like "why i'm thinking so much and can't find anything Better than mate in 2?"

  • @carteradams43
    @carteradams43 Před rokem +5

    Before the video starts: I would move the white rook up one peice. The king cannot move to any safe space minus the knight. Though not a mate in 1 you have full control over that king

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem +2

      Yes, that is true. There are a bunch of mate in 2s from that position, but the key is to be able to recognize that it is actually black's move to begin with. Thanks for watching!

    • @andrewkandasamy
      @andrewkandasamy Před rokem

      @@ChessforCharity I mean, even if it's black's turn to move, it's still mate in 2. A mate in 1 only occurs when the turn player can checkmate by moving a piece.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem

      @@andrewkandasamy I see what you are saying, but black has not completed their turn yet. So, if you want to get technical, each side has a 1/2 move to play in order to checkmate.

    • @andrewkandasamy
      @andrewkandasamy Před rokem

      @@ChessforCharity Right, which is why it is not a mate in 1. Because black moving would end the chess game turn since chess game turns always end after black’s half move.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem

      @@andrewkandasamy I think it is a terminology thing then. If each side makes a 1/2 move, then the game is over in 1 full move. Sorry if that wasn't explained well. I am working on improving my explanations.

  • @Nickanew
    @Nickanew Před rokem +5

    I loved this puzzle because of it's intricacy

  • @johnmeo1532
    @johnmeo1532 Před rokem +2

    "Think outside the box" puzzles always draw a fine line. Once I realized that black couldn't have moved last, I concluded black must have another piece we can't see, and placing it on c8 allows the white pawn to capture it for mate in 1.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem

      I completely agree. I think 'outside the box' puzzles can be controversial because it feels like a trick even though it is just a different type of puzzle. I view them more like logic puzzles operating within the game of chess. 😀

    • @balancemaster55
      @balancemaster55 Před rokem +1

      @@ChessforCharity the problem is many puzzles are not real game examples and some are not possible to occur in a real game so many assume the puzzle’s start does not have to make sense.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem

      @@balancemaster55 Yep, you are right about that. So, when one sees there is no mate in 1 if it is white's move, they have to question those assumptions and then deduce that it can't be white's move. I will try to explain that better in the future. Thanks for watching.

    • @NevarKanzaki
      @NevarKanzaki Před rokem +10

      @@ChessforCharity I'd say that it is controversial due to presentation. It isn't a chess puzzle at all and won't really assist anyone in their chess thinking in the slightest because it is rooted in a trick, not actually gameplay skill. I would put it akin to freeze framing a basketball game and asking what you should do next but aha, you've tricked the viewer because in reality, the actual official game ball got knocked over to the bench and the one that appears to be in play was actually accidentally thrown onto the court by one of the fans. Presenting that as a problem for decision making on the basketball court would be seen as deceptive and a waste of time to whoever you told that too. The same is true in this case. The trick here isn't that the position itself is tricky. It is that you (and or the composer) are misrepresenting the situation by intentionally asking someone to make a decision in a situation where the player literally cannot make a decision on what to do next because it isn't their move but you're just not telling them that. Similarly, any player on that court would have known which ball was in play. Freeze framing it and asking someone to analyze it is a waste of their time and people don't like it when they realize after they walked over that the guy who said "Hey, come over here!" intentionally brought them over to waste their time. I agree that that's not any better than "Hey, there's a black piece on c8 that got knocked off the board" or "It is there but only a few pixels. Too bad you couldn't see it" or "Yeah, we're not actually playing chess. We're actually playing Bughouse. I take the rook and hand it to my partner who delivers checkmate with it on the other board".
      Calling it mate in 1 also carries implications. A checkmate in 1 position implies either white to play and mate in 1 or black to play and mate in 1", similar to how the sentence "Go!" in the English language really implies "You go!".
      I would also add that chess puzzles are not necessarily legal positions so using the lack of the ability for there to have been a previous legal black move to reach the position is not valid reasoning and even if there was, it doesn't change the above.
      While I don't prefer the idea of masquerading one type of puzzle as another, I think if I were to present this, the wording I'd use is "This is the position. On his next move, white checkmated black. How is this possible?" You can tell them that "This is the legal position" if you want to use the working backwards logic. This separates it from standard chess vernacular which sidesteps the implications and using the question "How is this possible?" helps to divorce it from the expectations of normality better than saying to think outside the box while also giving the audience a heads up that there's often going to be trick answers and that this likely isn't much a chess puzzle at all. Thus when you tell them the answer there will a lot less controversy to follow as missing information is a hallmark of "How is this possible?" problems.

    • @johnmeo1532
      @johnmeo1532 Před rokem +2

      @@NevarKanzaki I really like that reframing of the question, it turns it into a puzzle rather than a trick.

  • @alissonossila7462
    @alissonossila7462 Před 3 měsíci +1

    5:59 If you haven't seen the knight is PINNED to the king, then since the knight cannot move because that would cause his own king to die and this is prohibited, THIS IS NOT CHECKMATE. (In fact, the Black King didn't get the hashtag symbol (#) meaning he didn't lose.).

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 3 měsíci

      The promotion to the knight is checkmate because of the rook. The knight is protected by the queen and the black king is being checked by the white rook. Therefore, it is checkmate. Thank you for watching! :)

  • @xlr8493
    @xlr8493 Před rokem +8

    If pawn promotes to a black piece then it'll still be mate in 1

    • @Fdo1010
      @Fdo1010 Před rokem +5

      no, it won't, because the king will take the rook

  • @ivanpogildiakov1948
    @ivanpogildiakov1948 Před rokem +7

    It is not respectful to invite people to solve an incorrectly stated problem. A tricky logic puzzle, a problem which requires a non-standard way of thinking, must be stated correctly.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem +1

      “Correctly” is a tough word to define. Sufficient information was given in order to deduce who is to move. That is what I was vague. Sorry it wasn’t clearer. If I said it was black to move, it would be super easy. That is what one can just show the position and figure it out from there. Sorry you found it disrespectful. I appreciate the feedback though. I am always trying to improve. 🙂

  • @Danelius90
    @Danelius90 Před rokem +2

    Funny, my first thought was it being black's turn, but black to get a mate in 1 (if position was a little different maybe the white king could get mated by the rook).
    I almost stumbled on it, as I thought if white went Qb6 (sort of wasting a move) then the only legal move for black is Rxa7 which results in mate, but it's not mate in 1. Didn't take the last step to combine the ideas!

  • @dbass4973
    @dbass4973 Před rokem

    definitely a nice one, thanks for sharing

  • @Bodkin_Ye_Pointy
    @Bodkin_Ye_Pointy Před rokem +4

    How is that mate in one? There were two moves. One black and then one white.

    • @rbarnes4076
      @rbarnes4076 Před měsícem +1

      It is verbal trickery combined with chess. I've never like these types of puzzles because it violates the definition of puzzles that are 'mate in 1'.. which always starts with the person playing the pieces that start on the bottom (in this case white) and the # = the number of friendly moves to reach some conclusion.
      Some folks think it is cute.. I just think chess is difficult enough without puzzle makers trying to intentionally confuse the situation by violating the definition of the puzzle.

  • @meraldlag4336
    @meraldlag4336 Před rokem +5

    Me watching Greatname: “hmm yes promotion to a black knight”
    Crap it doesn’t even work lmao

  • @ScientistMuichiro
    @ScientistMuichiro Před 7 měsíci

    I figured that out. I’m not joking, after 5 minutes of thinking I thought outside of the box and got it right

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 7 měsíci +1

      Nice work! I am glad you figured it out! Thanks for watching!

  • @deangelojohnson137
    @deangelojohnson137 Před rokem +1

    1:55 for the fun fact, capture the rook and instead of promoting to a queen you have to promote to a knight, and then bring queen to b8. CHECKMATE

  • @betorka4904
    @betorka4904 Před rokem +8

    we have been bamboozled

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem

      🤣 I was trying hard to not make it a trick problem, but this one was so cool, I had to share. Thanks for watching!

    • @betorka4904
      @betorka4904 Před rokem +1

      @@ChessforCharity its a very nice puzzle... foR A TRICKSTER!!! nice vid tho

  • @makwah
    @makwah Před rokem +7

    What if white captured a piece and ended up in this position?

  • @clonefighter1996
    @clonefighter1996 Před rokem +1

    I _DID_
    deduce that Black is the one to move here, but I thought that you were supposed to find M1 for Black LUL
    Good one.

  • @reggiesharpe1214
    @reggiesharpe1214 Před rokem +2

    If you use this logic to give black the first move the actual notation would actually read 1…Ka7 not 1.Ka7.

  • @finesseandstyle
    @finesseandstyle Před 7 měsíci +3

    Since it's black to move, there is no mate in 1. A puzzle designed as mate in 1 means that the attacking turn, black, can mate in 1 move. Basically the point of this puzzle is to pay attention which color to move

    • @yoseftreitman7226
      @yoseftreitman7226 Před 3 měsíci

      The evaluation of the position is M1 for white.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 3 měsíci

      Perhaps the compose of the puzzle was mistaken. I thought that the half move for black and the half move for white would constitute 1 move. I see it is ‘tricky’, but it seems like a mate in one to me. Thank you for watching!

  • @eifbkcn
    @eifbkcn Před rokem +7

    Been a while since I have seen this channel, but this was a nice, simple application of retrograde conventions. If a viewer simply knows the rules of problems, it is not terribly difficult, and I got the truck immediately as a result. Still took a minute it get the 2. b8=S underpromotion though, so that was cool

  • @FatherManus
    @FatherManus Před rokem

    I finally figured one of these puzzles out. After he said it was Black’s move I concluded that Black only have three possible moves. If King takes the Rook then Pawn takes Rook and promotes to a Knight. Checkmate. If King takes Knight then Pawn moves to B8 and again promotes to a Knight. Checkmate. And finally if the Rook takes the Knight then Rook to C8. Also Checkmate.

  • @ramonacosta2647
    @ramonacosta2647 Před 7 měsíci

    You missed a critical possibility. Black refuses to move, runs out the clock, and loses without white mating.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 7 měsíci

      Haha, I suppose that is possible. :) Thanks for watching!

  • @stefan7848
    @stefan7848 Před rokem +8

    So where is mate in 1? This is like clickbait puzzle

  • @skyrahmad5594
    @skyrahmad5594 Před rokem +3

    freaking mindblowing that so damn good to tricking 🗿

  • @yoseftreitman7226
    @yoseftreitman7226 Před 3 měsíci +1

    The best of these I ever saw was one that said "white to move and force mate in as few moves as possible." White didn't have M1 in that puzzle, but did have a check that where the black king couldn't move, nothing could capture the checking piece, and the only blocking move opened up a discovered checkmate on the white king. White couldn't force a win in one move, but could *force* a loss.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 3 měsíci

      Ah, I like that! If you ever find it, feel free to share! I will have to look into that! Thank you for watching! 🙂

    • @AnanthNat
      @AnanthNat Před 2 měsíci

      Technically that is "mate in one and a half"😂

    • @yoseftreitman7226
      @yoseftreitman7226 Před 2 měsíci

      @@ChessforCharity I found it! I remember where I saw it. It wasn't originally a chess puzzle, but inspired by a Gothamchess video. czcams.com/video/7ENrzaFDta4/video.htmlsi=DEZJfv_1YXIncMA8 The position appears at 19:54, but for the trick puzzle to work the black queen needs to be moved to the back rank.

  • @master11050
    @master11050 Před rokem +1

    After the "Think outside the box" comment, I expected to hear "I told you to find the 'mate' in one, I never said 'checkmate' in one. Here's how you get stalemate in one move."

  • @Boko888
    @Boko888 Před 7 měsíci +8

    I want my minute back. Theres click bait, and then theres straight up lying.

    • @yoseftreitman7226
      @yoseftreitman7226 Před 3 měsíci +2

      The evaluation of the position is M1 for white. It can be proven that it is black's turn, so that fact didn't need to be given.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 2 měsíci +3

      Yeah, this is not straight up lying at all. This is 1/2 move + 1/2 move. I think there is more to it than you were thinking. I am sorry you didn't enjoy it. Thank you for watching though!

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 2 měsíci

      Yep! Haha

  • @lokeshpatel6540
    @lokeshpatel6540 Před rokem +6

    It’s not mate in 1. When black moves it’s already one move in. Then white mates on the second move. I believe that is the notation regarding moves

    • @curtissmith4628
      @curtissmith4628 Před rokem +3

      Notation is that move 1 in a game is white then black. Move two is white then black, etc.
      Same reason a mate in 2 involves 3 moves, two for one player and one for the other.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem +2

      I see what you are saying, but I think about it as the next move for white results in checkmate. We just aren’t told that it is black’s move from the beginning. We are seeing the second ‘half’ of black’s turn. It is all fun to think about. Hopefully you enjoyed the puzzle. Thank you for watching! 🙂

    • @gresach
      @gresach Před rokem

      This is a good point to ask about. For mate in n, if we flip the player on move because it's illegal with white to move, then by the relevant footnote to Codex Article 15, Black gets an extra move, and White has to come with answers to everything that Black can play. But the stipulation still says "mate in n".

    • @lokeshpatel6540
      @lokeshpatel6540 Před rokem +1

      Definitely a fun puzzle! Enjoyed solving it.

  • @reidflemingworldstoughestm1394

    Couple of ways:
    1) Force one turn possession of your pawn to black, then Q takes b7.
    2) b7 takes a8, promote to a king.

  • @ungatoenunasillaxd1105
    @ungatoenunasillaxd1105 Před 7 měsíci

    Everyone had find the solution but no one knew it was the right solution before he said it in the video.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 7 měsíci

      Haha, true. And many people are upset with the solution. I think it is cool! Thanks for watching!

  • @Sameer-er3wz
    @Sameer-er3wz Před rokem +3

    People have been incredibly respectful in the chat here. My immediate honest reaction was “Idiot!”

  • @eriktempelman2097
    @eriktempelman2097 Před rokem +9

    Very nice puzzle! You may want to spend a bit more time explaining how this position can be reached legally.

    • @harshkumarf4379
      @harshkumarf4379 Před rokem

      MANY LEGAL VARIATIONS POSSIBLE ,, LETS SUPPOSE BLACK ROOK WAS IN H5 AND WHITE KNIGHT WAS AT G5 ,, SO NOW BLACK CAN GO RH8 AND WHITE CAN MOVE NH7,, NOW ITS BLACKS TURN ,,

  • @pathwaytousername
    @pathwaytousername Před rokem +2

    Wait... I think it's black's move. I still haven't heard them say "white to move" yet, and it is a guaranteed M1. It would work, bc Kxc7 bxa1=N mate, Rxa7 Rc8 mate, Kxa7 b1=N mate.

  • @SamuelPearlman
    @SamuelPearlman Před rokem +2

    Well-played, Sir!

  • @Overkill9991
    @Overkill9991 Před rokem +5

    So it’s black to move but a mate in 1 for whits

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem

      Exactly. I am glad you were able to figure it out. Thanks for watching!

    • @kilianlechner5400
      @kilianlechner5400 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Well here is the problem. There is 0 logic in this sentence. BLACK TO MOVE AND M1 FOR WHITE. if its BLACK TO MOVE then it has to be M2 FOR WHITE. Ur logic in this Video is completely false. And congrats on losing subs for clickbaiting

    • @kayquealbuquerque7213
      @kayquealbuquerque7213 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@kilianlechner5400The checkmate clock doesn't count the opponent moves. A checkmate in two for white is a position that white moves, black moves then white checkmate.

    • @HustenbonbonTV
      @HustenbonbonTV Před 26 dny

      ​@@kilianlechner5400 If you put this position into an Engine it says Mate in 1

  • @jakubosadnik2693
    @jakubosadnik2693 Před rokem +8

    When you said to think outside the box i thougth about killing your oponent

  • @chandlergloyd4230
    @chandlergloyd4230 Před rokem +1

    cool puzzle ill remember this when i need to figure out whos turn it is.

  • @jaikapoor8060
    @jaikapoor8060 Před rokem +1

    I was actually able to solve this puzzle...one just need to watch full video first and then try it...it's quite easy

  • @timhuson4800
    @timhuson4800 Před rokem +4

    remind me to now open any more of these, unless they are labeled "trick answer."

  • @dhanushv4491
    @dhanushv4491 Před rokem +5

    Technically it's a forced mate in 2 😅

    • @HustenbonbonTV
      @HustenbonbonTV Před 26 dny

      No because White only moved once. The Evaluation says +M1 which means Mate in 1.

  • @HoSza1
    @HoSza1 Před rokem +2

    Someone please look up what us the definition of "a move". Also whether "mate in 1" means the same as "mate in one *move*". Black's half move is legally considered be part if the previous move and white's final answer is part of the last move (a.k.a. numbered pair of half moves) so this 8s technically a "mate in two". Although making it explicit that it's black to move would have been clearly more honest, now everyone may rightfully feel like this was somewhat of a trick question actually.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 2 měsíci

      It is unconventional counting for sure. :) Thanks for watching!

  • @abclove97
    @abclove97 Před rokem +1

    So I just started watching the video, seen all the possibilities, my guess is black moved first, rook likely eats the knight and white rook likely puts the king in checl

  • @qwerttz1033
    @qwerttz1033 Před rokem +3

    I think this puzzle is wrong because we don't know if this position occurred in a game or if this is just a built up position and move 1/white to move

  • @HitsarPrideTheTanker
    @HitsarPrideTheTanker Před rokem +6

    I knew there was something wrong, bcs it was a 7 minute video for an impossible mate in 1 puzzle if it was white to move

  • @Ultimabuster92
    @Ultimabuster92 Před 6 měsíci +2

    You know... i just watched another chess puzzle video and i couldn't solve it and then i watched the video to the end and got the solution. (I'm less than a beginner btw) I left the video with a pretty positive mood however, because i could see where i was wrong. So, it's not like i'm too proud to admit defeat. It's more like i'm pretty annoyed when i have the feeling that i got cheated and that is what this video gave me.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 3 měsíci

      I am sorry you feel that way. There was never any intention of cheating the audience. I am simply presenting the logic puzzle. The cool part is that we can figure out who is to move without being told that it is black. I think that is cool - it's what makes it an 'out of the box' type of logic puzzle. If you are interested in regular chess puzzles, check out my (many) other videos. Thank you for watching!

  • @SB-ex2px
    @SB-ex2px Před 2 měsíci

    You can solve this even thinking "inside the box".
    1. You just hear "mate in one", but never said "white is to move". So be cautious and ask yourself: if not given, then can I find out who is to move? Try both possibilities.
    2. In chess a move is like "1. e4 e5", or "1. ... e5 2. Nf3". e4 or e5 or Nf3 are called half-move or ply. Certainly sometimes these are also called moves, so again you need to try both interpretations.
    If you have these in mind, you can solve the puzzle.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 2 měsíci +1

      I wish more people saw it the way you described it. :)

  • @pirilon78
    @pirilon78 Před rokem +5

    Ah yes a "logic" puzzle where the hard part is to intentionally misinterpret the information given to us to force a different board where you can actually checkmate in one
    So "logical"

    • @SappinYourSentries
      @SappinYourSentries Před rokem

      Yeah. This is the first video I’ve seen from the channel and it makes me not take him seriously and not want to watch his other videos.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem

      Nope, the “logic” part is to question your assumptions walking in and realizing that mate in 1 doesn’t automatically mean white to move. Once you figure that out, you realize black must move to complete their turn, and then it is mate in 1. Not trying to be deceptive, just trying to enjoy a logic puzzle.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem

      @SappinYourSentry - I am sorry you feel that way, but I would encourage you to not judge an entire channel by one video. If you see where I am coming from, you will see that I am not trying to deceive anyone.

    • @jacobmarshall5391
      @jacobmarshall5391 Před rokem +1

      I mean he tells you there's a mate in one. So if you couldn't figure out that there must be some possible way to make that happen, then that's on you. It seems a lot of people couldn't find it, gave up, and then blamed the puzzle, or channel, instead of accepting that they just weren't capable of solving it.

    • @Ultimabuster92
      @Ultimabuster92 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@jacobmarshall5391 You know... i just watched another chess puzzle video and i couldn't solve it and then i watched the video to the end and got the solution. (I'm less than a beginner btw) I left the video with a pretty positive mood however, because i could see where i was wrong. So, it's not like i'm too proud to admit defeat. It's more like i'm pretty annoyed when i have the feeling that i got cheated and that is what this video gave me.

  • @daveleslie4396
    @daveleslie4396 Před 9 měsíci +3

    How misleading.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 2 měsíci

      It is a logic chess puzzle, so it may challenge some of your *assumptions*. The fact that one can *deduce* that it is black to move by studying the board makes it a logic puzzle. Then, the 1/2 move for black + 1/2 for white is 1 full move. Thanks for watching!

  • @gamercs21
    @gamercs21 Před rokem

    Consider moving along with the point faster instead of exhausting every alternative and ultimately settling on something that comes across as drawn out. This might have been better as a short.

  • @Arial55555
    @Arial55555 Před rokem +1

    I, as someone who doesn't play chess and only (at most) understands how pieces move, started by thinking "Well, when they say 'Mate in (Insert Number)" in movies, it's immediately followed by the other guy making a move, and then the first guy repeating "Now it's Mate in (Insert Lower Number)." So I figured "In what way is one side only capable of making a move(s) that screws them over and ends the game faster for the other player?" And from there, I figured out that all of Black's moves were bad choices.
    The fact that I figured this out before clicking on the video makes me proud. Maybe I am good at chess in some odd way.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem

      That is great! I am glad you were able to figure it out. Stay with chess and I bet you will continue improving!

  • @teapotexorcist
    @teapotexorcist Před rokem +4

    There is no mate in 1. If it's white to move there is no single move that is mate. If it's black to move there is obviously no move that is mate.
    You said you didn't want it to be clickbait but you're a liar. The title is clearly worded to say that the puzzle is hard. But when you look at the position evaluating it is simple. Therefore the title is saying that there has to be some hidden idea/trick which is hard to spot. This means that you know everyone is going to see the position and see there is no mate in 1.
    I'm now never going to watch another video, subscribe, or donate to your chosen charity. Good work on the clickbait though, hope the engagement stats were worth it 👍

    • @SappinYourSentries
      @SappinYourSentries Před rokem +1

      Agreed (with the possible exception of donating to the charities. Some of them he’s donating to I know are good causes and they didn’t choose to be associated with this guy). This video (and the fact that he keeps doubling and tripling down on the fact that “it’s just a cool logic puzzle and not clickbait”) makes me angry.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem

      I very much disagree. You are able to logically conclude that it is black to move. Once you figure that out, you realize that it is mate in 1 because black hasn’t finished their move. That is the point.
      I am sorry you didn’t enjoy the video, but it wasn’t intended on being a trick. I would encourage you to check out other videos and not judge the entirety of my channel from one video.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem

      I still don’t think it is clickbait. I think it is a logic puzzle that some people are upset about. 🙂

    • @teapotexorcist
      @teapotexorcist Před rokem

      When black finishes their move there will still not be mate on the board. Saying it is mate in 1 is a lie. It's like having a board in starting position and saying it's mate in 1 because at some point in the game it's mate in 1. It's not a logic puzzle because it is nonsensical. You aren't able to deduce it's black to move because even if it is black to move it is not mate in 1. You literally just said it yourself - once black finishes their move it will be mate in 1. So it will be black's 1 move, then white's 1 move to mate. That's what you just said, so it's a blatant contradiction and therefore a lie that you are aware of. If you said something like "every move ends in mate" then it would be honest but then no-one would come here. The whole reason for the video existing is the lie. So I'm not surprised you're deciding to die on this hill because you lose the respect of the audience either way.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem

      @@teapotexorcist I understand what you are saying, but I would ask for you to understand where I am coming from.
      - Each move is called a 'half move' in chess terminology. Black finishing their (half) move will allow white to make their (half) move to win. To me, that is just 1/2 +1/2 = 1 move.
      - You are able to deduce that it is black's move. That is where the logic part comes in.
      - I am sorry you don't see what I am saying. As I mentioned, I am not trying to disrespect or trick my audience. I just wanted to present a cool puzzle. If I lost your respect, I apologize. I just *love* chess and helping people and I thought this was a cool puzzle to share. It wasn't intended on being deceptive. I just ask that you don't question my intentions for the channel overall. I hope to see you around the comments section more in the future. 🤝

  • @shadethenovice
    @shadethenovice Před rokem +3

    I mean, I did consider that it was blacks move, but I also obviously didn't find a mate in 1 for black, so I was just kinda confused calling this a mate in 1 when black could not mate in 1.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem

      I get what you mean. The key insight is to realize that after black's move, it is mate in 1 no matter what. :) Thanks for watching!

    • @ezra7088
      @ezra7088 Před rokem

      yes the same thing happened with me

    • @SappinYourSentries
      @SappinYourSentries Před rokem +1

      @@ChessforCharity You can use this same reasoning to call literally any mating tactics puzzle a mate in one lmao. “Just deduce the other moves, and then one move from the end of the sequence it’s mate in one, therefore it’s a mate in one puzzle.”

  • @arekkrolak6320
    @arekkrolak6320 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Well, not all chess problems come from games, some are constructed by puzzle creators, so the pieces never actually moved to their positions.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 2 měsíci

      That is a fair point as well! Thank you for watching! :)

  • @minuspi8372
    @minuspi8372 Před rokem +2

    So what this is is the second half of the first turn of a mate in 2

  • @Ephraim225
    @Ephraim225 Před rokem +4

    Okay, this is officially the dumbest puzzle in the history of forever. You DELIBERATELY MISLED THE VIEWER. At that point it stops being a puzzle and starts being nonsense.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem

      I disagree. It is a logic puzzle where you have to see that it can't be white's move, so it must be black's move. I would not call it misleading since it is still checkmate in 1 after black finished their turn - which comes from a logical deduction. Thanks for watching!

    • @jaideepshekhar4621
      @jaideepshekhar4621 Před rokem

      Why is it misleading? Did he say it was whites move?

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem

      @@jaideepshekhar4621 ⭐

    • @JohnWTolbert
      @JohnWTolbert Před rokem +2

      @@jaideepshekhar4621 it was misleading because the solving condition changes over the course of the video. We start with "Find the mate-in-one" and then we end with "prove that any move black makes leads to mate-in-one". Those two conditions are fundamentally different. One does not lead to the other.

    • @jaideepshekhar4621
      @jaideepshekhar4621 Před rokem

      @@JohnWTolbert "prove that any move black makes leads to mate-in-one" no. Rephrase that as "prove it's black's turn instead of white in this M1". You do understand that BOTH players move every turn? There is still a M1 even when its the other player's turn.

  • @ChessforCharity
    @ChessforCharity  Před rokem +201

    Hi Everyone! Thanks for being here!
    I just wanted to address some comments that I have been getting and hopefully provide some clarity (SPOILERS AHEAD):
    - This is NOT meant to be clickbait or a trick - it is meant to be a chess logic puzzle (like it says in the title). The point is that one is supposed to examine the position and *logically deduce* that it cannot be white's move. If it were, black would have no legal move in the previous position. Therefore, it is must black's move in the position on screen. That is the logic part of the puzzle. No tricks, no errors, just logical deduction.
    - Yes, it is mate in 1 because black has not finished their turn yet. Once black moves, it will be white's move and it will be checkmate in 1 move. Compare that to any other forced checkmate. It is the same idea. 🙂

    • @moneybagsocool8956
      @moneybagsocool8956 Před rokem +3

      Man Make entire paragraph

    • @RuptimusPrime
      @RuptimusPrime Před rokem +75

      Yeah no, this is clickbait

    • @Catofborealvalley
      @Catofborealvalley Před rokem +40

      You can't deduce that it's blacks move, because we don't know if there even was a previous move. It's only under the assumption that this was a regular game, and not just a composition with impossible requirements.

    • @zeebest1004
      @zeebest1004 Před rokem +27

      Clearly KLICKBAIT! Chess has standards - like 1. SAYING who is to move and 2. The chessboard is configured so the “to move” side is towards the player! 3. PLUS, this “answer” would literally NEVER occur in a real game!!

    • @pacosagredo8358
      @pacosagredo8358 Před rokem +19

      When you tell someone mate in 1 without indicating which player, one will logically look at both white and black and see which side has a mate in 1. Your "logic" puzzle where I have to realize mate in 1 includes finding the move for my opponent that then creates my mate in 1, makes people feel cheated. Yes you technically offered a logic puzzle, but you did not follow the logic of chess. you did not tell the chess people to stop applying their chess logic. Anyone who stumbles into your video from the chess world will deduce you make no sense.

  • @pawn4
    @pawn4 Před 7 měsíci

    how do you color the squares with different colors

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 7 měsíci

      Good question! You right click a square and then use either 'CTRL', 'Shift', or 'ALT' depending on what color you want. 🙂

  • @Sunnernite
    @Sunnernite Před 6 měsíci +1

    First thing that came to mind was how did we get to this position. Instantly realized it was black to move.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 2 měsíci

      I am glad you were able to figure it out! :) Thank you for watching!

  • @Peregrinans
    @Peregrinans Před rokem

    Good puzzle! This is very out of the box and tricky but also interesting as a kind of slight trolling ;)

  • @PilotharmonyandDividingstew

    Rxc8 # because the king couldn't move in any square, can't take the pawn because of the queen defending it, as well as the knight defends the Rook on the C8 file so there you have it

  • @kordellcurl7559
    @kordellcurl7559 Před 7 měsíci

    By definition it’s still not a mate in one because it’s black’s move first. Basically it’s a mate in 1-1/2

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 2 měsíci

      Not quite. 1/2 move for black plus a 1/2 move for white = 1 move. The position begins with black to move. The trick is being able to deduce that. Thank you for watching!

  • @uggupuggu
    @uggupuggu Před 8 měsíci +1

    Who else immediately realized it was black to move and solved this puzzle?

  • @kalaveryx
    @kalaveryx Před rokem

    I'm surprised I was able to figure that out. Though I totally skipped Kxc7, but at least I got the first two

  • @josefserf1926
    @josefserf1926 Před 7 měsíci

    Its ridiculously hard to see because you tend to look for the most active moves when its actually the least active.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 2 měsíci

      Yes, this one is a tough one to solve. Thank you for watching!

  • @fishjeffren9721
    @fishjeffren9721 Před rokem +1

    axb8Q
    'Rook' is King
    'King' is Rook
    'Knight' is Pawn,
    'Pawn' is Knight
    and 'Queen' is Bishop

  • @HelloIAmAnExist
    @HelloIAmAnExist Před 7 měsíci

    I actually considered this when I saw the thumbnail, but I didn't find what to do with black king takes rook

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 2 měsíci

      I am glad you were so close! Thank you for watching! :)

  • @emilerhard4189
    @emilerhard4189 Před rokem +1

    Nice when I saw the thumbnail it was certain

  • @Malignant_Tumour
    @Malignant_Tumour Před rokem

    Great video, as always!

  • @milanvaru3917
    @milanvaru3917 Před rokem

    In this video basic learning this what is the asking a question in given that and after we get answer. 👍

  • @abbysomesan7621
    @abbysomesan7621 Před rokem

    To be honest, while I was scrolling down CZcams and I've send the preview of the video, I just assumed it was black to move. It was only after I clicked on it and the sound kicked in I went like 'oh I must have been wrong'.

  • @NoobieAbhinav
    @NoobieAbhinav Před rokem +2

    I have a question though
    A complete move starts with White's ply move (ply move = half move) followed by Black making their ply move. Since it is Black to Move, wouldn't it be Mate in 2 since Black's ply move ends one move and White's ply move starts another move?

    • @TheLifeLaVita
      @TheLifeLaVita Před 7 měsíci +1

      yea it's mate in 2. The "puzzle solution" is that it is not mate in 1 lmao

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 2 měsíci +1

      It is an unconventional way of counting that makes it a mate in one. We arrive on the position and make 2 half moves. :)

    • @NoobieAbhinav
      @NoobieAbhinav Před 2 měsíci

      @@ChessforCharity makes sense, thank you

  • @Saoshi_
    @Saoshi_ Před rokem +1

    Idk if that counts but I figured Kd8 (or really any king move) leaving black with its only rook move and king move, but ig thats mate in 2

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před rokem

      Yeah, that is mate in 2 since it involves 2 white moves. The key is to question who is on move and then figure it out from there. 🙂

    • @SappinYourSentries
      @SappinYourSentries Před rokem +1

      @@ChessforCharity You think you are being clever but you are not and it makes me angry.

  • @andyruecking4926
    @andyruecking4926 Před rokem

    When he said to think outside the box I thought the chess pieces could move outside the box

  • @SimranArora-vq7em
    @SimranArora-vq7em Před rokem

    wow that was the best puzzle that i have ever seen and it was mind blowing can you find find more and more puzzles like this one but can you find another mate in one in this puzzle and if you do can you please make a video and if you are playing chess on online and you really really think that it was a good game and can you also explain that video too.

    • @ChessforCharity
      @ChessforCharity  Před 2 měsíci

      I am glad you enjoyed it! Thank you for watching and I will do my best to keep making fun videos. :)