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Bc6 Rb1+
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Ke2 Rxh1
3.Bg2+ Kxg2
4.Nf4+ Kg1
5.Ke1 G2
6.Ne2#
Edit K for knight to N
6 2 ReplyIt appears I'm an idiot too
I'm very new to chess annotation and i keep using k for knight and king.
4 0 ReplyI think it's meant to be
Ke1 G2
as Ne1 is an illegal move but that's just a notation issue3 0 ReplyYeah it was very late i was meant to be asleep not playing chess puzzles knight starts with a k haha
2 0 Reply
It seems to be open ended if black doesn't take queen, though
2 0 ReplyBishop moves to g2 checkmate of it doesn't check the king.
If it does then the king walks back towards the rook. Until it takes it or the rook doesn't check the king ending the game
2 0 ReplyWhat about Rb2, Kd3, Pg2?
2 0 ReplyIt gets all very messy if black doesn't take the bate it seems
2 0 ReplyIn what position? After 1. Bc6 Rb1+ 2. Ke2 Rb2+ 3. Kd3 Black doesn't have anything but spite checks. And if ...g2, White can now safely go Qc1 with quick checkmate to follow via Qh6+ (since g2 is covered by the bishop).
2 0 Reply
Ah right
1 0 Reply
What's interesting is if black moves to Rf4 and ignores the queen i see how it gets very open ended
2 0 Reply
Nicely done! You solved the main (study) line. There's other lines where Black actually holds out longer, but they're much simpler to calculate.
2 0 ReplyWhat happens if black declines the queen? Too lazy to calculate it out at this point
2 0 ReplyAnything it seems. But I'm probably missing a lot
2 0 Reply
Nf4 to Ne1 isn't a valid move?
1 0 ReplyMeant to be Ke1
I fucked up the Knight and King it was 11 at night when i was doing it
1 0 ReplyNo probs. Looks good. I'm a little wary of solutions that aren't forced, but this seems the most reasonable I've seen so far.
1 0 Reply
After 4. Nf4+, wouldn't it be better for the king to go to f3? Or am I overlooking something obvious
Edit: answered my own question, white king covers f3 after moving to e2, forgot about that
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