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  2. En passant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/En_passant

    The en passant capture is the only capturing move in chess where the capturing piece moves to a square not occupied by the captured piece. [6]: 463 Because many casual players are unfamiliar with or misunderstand the en passant rule, administrators on internet chess sites frequently receive erroneous complaints of bugs, cheating or hacking. [7]

  3. Glossary of chess - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_chess

    A move by a pawn or piece that removes from the board the opponent's pawn or piece. The capturing piece then occupies the square of the captured piece, except in the case of a capture that is done en passant. [66] castling A move in which the king and a rook are moved at the same time.

  4. Forsyth–Edwards Notation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forsyth–Edwards_Notation

    An updated version of the spec has since made it so the target square is recorded only if a legal en passant capture is possible, but the old version of the standard is the one most commonly used. [7] [8] Halfmove clock: The number of halfmoves since the last capture or pawn advance, used for the fifty-move rule. [9]

  5. Rules of chess - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rules_of_chess

    A pawn, unlike other pieces, captures differently from how it moves. A pawn can capture an enemy piece on either of the two squares diagonally in front of the pawn. It cannot move to those squares when vacant except when capturing en passant. The pawn is also involved in the two special moves en passant and promotion. [10]

  6. Chess - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chess

    A pawn can only be captured en passant on the turn after it makes a two-square advance. In the animated diagram, the black pawn advances two squares from g7 to g5, and the white pawn on f5 takes it en passant, landing on g6. Promotion: when a pawn advances to its last rank, it is promoted and replaced with the player's choice of a queen, rook ...

  7. The nail-biting ending of Netflix thriller 'Don't Move' explained

    www.aol.com/dont-move-ends-victim-thanking...

    "Don't Move" is the latest thriller to grip Netflix's viewers. Here's what happened to the lead characters at the end of the film.

  8. Threefold repetition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Threefold_repetition

    The first edition of the FIDE rule from 1928 already defines the threefold repetition rule without considering castling and en passant capture rights. [44] To additionally consider castling and en passant capture rights was implicitly introduced in 1975 [46] and explicitly worded in 1985. [48] Prior to that, a 1964 FIDE interpretation ...

  9. “Don't Move” ending explained: Examining the wild twists and ...

    www.aol.com/dont-move-ending-explained-examining...

    Directed by Adam Schindler and Brian Netto and produced by Sam Raimi, Don’t Move is a well constructed, straightforward thriller that takes inspiration from the similarly-themed Alone (2020), as ...