Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted (edited)

There is no mate on f6. The black pawn is defending f6. Taking the e7 pawn isn't mate either.

 

EDIT: I assume you meant Qe6+. Black can just take the queen with the king.

Edited by Lord Antares
Posted (edited)

There is no mate on f6. The black pawn is defending f6. Taking the e7 pawn isn't mate either.

 

EDIT: I assume you meant Qe6+. Black can just take the queen with the king.

 

Thank you for pointing that out. +1

 

It shows how long since I last played, I even got the direction of play wrong.

 

I had that pesky pawn going for queen.

Edited by studiot
Posted

You should play some. Maybe with me if you like. I opened a chess thread not so long ago, but not a single soul responded, so I'm surprised to see this kind of puzzle be popular.

 

Anyways, I checked the puzzle with an egine because I suspected it wasn't a mate in two (no offense to the OP, but you can't know someone's chess level on a forum where they don't respond to chess threads lol). It's actually not straightforward at all. There is a lot of possible tactics involved because there are so many variations to calculate. You would think that any mate in two puzzle would be piss easy, but nope.

Posted

Back in the 1960s the Sunday Times published a chess problem every Sunday.

Some of these could take (me) all day, and many were mate in two.

Posted (edited)

I don't know what is going on here, but this is the third time I have posted this.

 

1) Rook to e3 check

 

2) If bishop (or knight) to e4 then

 

3) Queen to f6 mate.

 

Hi

 

R e3 + if answered by b e4+ it results in a check to the White king and therefore no Q move by White can follow ! I mean the next White move can not be of Queen !

Edited by Commander
Posted

Is the first move N x d4 ?

 

The question mark is not part of the move :)

 

Hi

 

N x d4 means N x r will be answered by n x R that is Black Knight taking white Rook on d3 Square. Then what is the next move ?

 

Position u13v0k7sjitt.png

Posted

N X R

 

N x r will be answered ny n x R

 

That means if White Knight removes Black rook Black answers with Black knight removing White Rook.

 

What is next by White ?

Nope. Think checkmate in TWO. You have to calculate till mate, otherwise it's just a guess.

As I said, the move isn't obvious at all.

 

Don't give up !

Posted

Oh Okay.. But why uncool wrong?

 

Which move ?

Because R - e3+ is followed by B - e4+ (Which means it's not mate next move)

 

Yes Right !

Posted (edited)

No, because you are in check from the bish on e4. (since the rook is no longer blocking - it moved to e3)

Edited by DrP
Posted (edited)

 

N x r will be answered ny n x R

 

That means if White Knight removes Black rook Black answers with Black knight removing White Rook.

 

What is next by White ?

 

Don't give up !

?

Edited by J.C.MacSwell
Posted

 

What do you find unclear there? If knight takes the rook on d4, then the black knight will take white's rook on d3 and there is no mate next move.

Sorry. I was editing my answer and something came up. I don't believe there is a solution. Good puzzle if there is one...

Posted

There is a solution. I just didn't want to reveal it. It's just not as straightforward as the title suggests.

But I might, seeing how it is unlikely to get solved.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.