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  2. Draw (chess) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Draw_(chess)

    A stalemate is an automatic draw, as is a draw due to impossibility of checkmate. A draw by threefold repetition or the fifty-move rule may be claimed by one of the players with the arbiter (normally using his score sheet), and claiming it is optional. The draw by fivefold repetition or the seventy-five-move rule is mandatory by the arbiter.

  3. Rules of chess - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rules_of_chess

    Each type of piece moves in a distinct way. The object of the game is to checkmate the opponent's king; checkmate occurs when a king is threatened with capture and has no escape. A game can end in various ways besides checkmate: a player can resign, and there are several ways a game can end in a draw.

  4. Checkmate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Checkmate

    A checkmate may occur in as few as two moves on one side with all of the pieces still on the board (as in fool's mate, in the opening phase of the game), in a middlegame position (as in the 1956 game called the Game of the Century between Donald Byrne and Bobby Fischer), [3] or after many moves with as few as three pieces in an endgame position.

  5. Glossary of chess - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_chess

    A king plus bishop versus a king plus bishop with the bishops on the same color is also a draw, since neither side can checkmate, regardless of play. Situations where checkmate is possible only if the inferior side blunders are covered by the fifty-move rule. [216] See Draw (chess) § Draws in all games. interference

  6. Stalemate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stalemate

    Stalemate is a situation in chess where the player whose turn it is to move is not in check and has no legal move. Stalemate results in a draw.During the endgame, stalemate is a resource that can enable the player with the inferior position to draw the game rather than lose. [2]

  7. Chess - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chess

    Draw on time: In games with a time control, the game is drawn if a player is out of time and no sequence of legal moves would allow the opponent to checkmate the player. [2] Draw by resignation: Under FIDE Laws, a game is drawn if a player resigns and no sequence of legal moves would allow the opponent to checkmate that player. [2]

  8. Tie (draw) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tie_(draw)

    Chess has five ways of ending or achieving a draw from an opponent: stalemate, agreement between the players, the fifty-move rule (and its extension, seventy-five-move rule), threefold repetition (and its extension, fivefold repetition), or neither player having sufficient material to checkmate. At top-level play, roughly half of games end in a ...

  9. Checkmate pattern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Checkmate_pattern

    It works by confining the king with a pawn and using a queen to execute the checkmate. Damiano's mate is often arrived at by first sacrificing a rook on the h-file, then checking the king with the queen on the a-file or h-file, and then moving in for the mate. The checkmate was first published by Pedro Damiano in 1512. [11]