Friday, 12 August 2011

Welcome to Chess Tables

Hello, And Welcome to Chess Tables. Play Chess. You Can Also Learn about chess here.




How To play:


Picture of the game Chess TitansChess Titans

Chess Titans: rules and basics

This guide is designed to get you started. More in-depth insight on this complex game can be found online or in your local library.

The object

Chess Titans is a game for two players, dubbed White and Black. The goal is to capture your opponent's king. In the game, this is known as a checkmate.

The board

Chess is played on a board with 64 squares. Each player begins with 16 pieces, lined up in two rows. The first row is occupied by pieces called pawns. The next row contains: a king, a queen, two rooks, two bishops, and two knights.

How to play

White goes first, then players alternate turns.
Click a piece and then click the square where you want to move it. When you select a piece, Chess Titans shows you where it can move by highlighting the square in blue; squares with enemy pieces available for capture are shown in red.
Name
How it moves
King
One square in any direction—forward, backward, sideways, or diagonally. The king is the game's weakest piece, and its most important.
Queen
An unlimited number of unoccupied squares in any direction. The queen is the game's most powerful piece.
Rook
An unlimited number of unoccupied squares, but only forward, backward, or sideways.
Bishop
An unlimited number of unoccupied squares, but only diagonally.
Knight
In the shape of an "L"—two squares in any direction, a 90-degree turn, and then one more square. The knight is the oddball of the game. Knights are also the only pieces that are allowed to jump other pieces.
Pawn
Two squares forward on its first move, one square forward thereafter. Exception: pawns capture enemy pieces by moving diagonally.
It's illegal to move into a square occupied by one of your own pieces. If you enter a square held by your opponent, the occupying piece is deemed captured and removed from the board.
A checkmate occurs when the king is trapped by an enemy piece with no available escape route. When this happens, the king's square will glow red.

Maneuvers

In additions to the moves allowed for each piece, the game of chess also has strategic maneuvers. Here are a few that you can try:

Castling

This defensive maneuver—designed to protect your king—involves moving two pieces at once. It's the only time in chess that this is legal. In a castle, the king moves two spaces sideways, while the rook moves to the space the king skipped over.
You're only allowed to castle if your king and rook are both in their original positions, the king isn't in check, and there are no pieces blocking the maneuver. If castling is possible, Chess Titans shows where the king should go by turning the square purple. To make the move, click the square.

En passant

This rare but useful offensive move—from the French for "in passing"—is legal only under certain circumstances. It occurs when one of your pawns is stationed in the fifth row, and an enemy pawn in an adjacent column attempts to advance two squares on its first move.
Normally the enemy pawn would evade capture (remember, pawns attack on the diagonal). By employing an en passant, you can move your piece diagonally to the empty square behind the enemy pawn to capture it. This is legal only if executed immediately following the enemy pawn's first move.

Pawn promotion

Advance a pawn clear across the board, and you can promote it to rook, knight, bishop, or queen. This increases the number of powerful pieces in your army. Upgrading to queen is typically the best strategy.