Relevant Chess Courses with discount code links: Chess Courses
Basic Rules of Chess
Relevant Course with discount code link: The Complete Guide to Chess for Beginners
1. Chessboard Orientation:
Always place the board with a light-colored square in the bottom-right corner.
2. Initial Piece Placement:
Rooks in the corners, knights next to rooks, then bishops. The queen is placed on her own color square, and the king takes the last central square.
3. Movement of Each Piece:
- Pawns: Move forward one square (or two from the starting rank). Capture diagonally.
- Knights: Move in an "L" shape: two squares in one direction, one square at a right angle. They can jump over pieces.
- Bishops: Move diagonally as far as the board allows.
- Rooks: Move vertically or horizontally any number of squares.
- Queens: Move both diagonally and straight — the most powerful piece.
- Kings: Move one square in any direction. The king must never move into check.
4. Goal of the Game:
The objective is to checkmate your opponent — put their king under attack with no legal escape.
5. Special Moves:
- Castling: A one-time move that allows the king to move two squares toward a rook, and the rook jumps over. Conditions apply (no pieces between, neither moved, not in check).
- En Passant: A pawn capturing move that applies when an opponent's pawn moves two squares and lands beside your pawn. You may capture as if it had moved only one square.
- Pawn Promotion: When a pawn reaches the last rank, it must be promoted — usually to a queen.
6. Legal and Illegal Moves:
A player may only move one piece per turn. The king cannot be moved into check. If no legal moves are available and the king is not in check, the game is a stalemate (a draw).
7. Check and Checkmate:
When a king is threatened, it is in "check." The player must make a move to remove the check. If no such move exists, it's checkmate — game over.
8. Draw Situations:
Games can end in a draw through stalemate, threefold repetition, 50-move rule, insufficient material, or agreement.
9. Time Controls (Optional):
Games may use clocks. If a player runs out of time, they lose (unless the opponent cannot checkmate with remaining material).
10. Chess Etiquette:
Be respectful, avoid distracting behavior, and always shake hands or say “Good game.”