the second puzzle with the bishop sacrifice accepted, theres a knight fork of the pawn on f2. and after takes pawn and making a attack on the other pawn on h3. in this position i made, the bishop on h7 could take your other knight and defend the pawn but if you sacrifice your other knight for the pawn and bishop takes, white can just make a queen. ( Knight to d3 is the fork if you dont see it )
@@rejireyfernandez274 If you move bishop to d4 instead of knight to e5 it can either capture the pawn or block the check should the pawn be promoted. No underpromotion necessary
Nelson, you do a great job with these puzzles. You're going to have more subscribers than you ever imagined as word of mouth gets around in the chess world. Great job.
I really enjoy these puzzles, your detailed explanations and your very nice enthusiasm. You are doing us a favour - and yourself as well, which makes it even more fun to watch. A great thanks.
In puzzle 2, I felt so smart when I found the rook promotion in like 10 seconds, but those knight and bishops once were way beyond me. damn that was a cool puzzle
3:50 There is also another reason why the knight is placed there. Looking back at 3:00 black could have used the queen for checking white with a4 to c4. Following this white would have needed to go with pawn g5 to g6 leaving c1 for the black queen to deliever another check with following checkmate if the knight wouldnt be there to defend c1.
At 7:50, if Kxb2, why not Nd3+ to fork the king and pawn? Then Kc3, Nxf2, then probably Bxf5, at which point any of your pawns can safely promote, and their only checking square (Be4) is guarded by the knight on f2.
5:11 black might not have a lot of options but at least a good one. Queen a3 to d6 check. White loses if using the pawn g5 to defend, so the knight again jumps in from e7 to g6, leading to a more interesting endgame :) Besides its also worth to mention that instead of moving the queen to a4 at 2:33 , black could use bishop h3 to c8 following queen h4 to c4 depending on whites decision.
3:06 . If the black queen wouldn't have gone to A3, and else would have gone to C6 dilivering a check hence the white pawn on G5 advances to G6 and then the black queen can go to c8 preventing both the white pawns from promoting and then if the white knight moves then C1 is a beautiful checkmate by the black queen after taking the white pawn which will be inbetween.
Puzzle 3: (from this point 15:12) White queen b3, black queen c5, white queen b1 checkmate. Or White queen b3, black queen g3, white queen b1 checkmate. Or White queen b3, black queen b1, white queen b1 checkmate. Or White queen b3, black biship b2, white queen take b2, checkmate. The ladder what ever wasn’t needed. Do correct me if my wrong, I am a bit drunk.
Wow puzzle #2 blew my mind, truly amazing. Is there a name for that puzzle cause I definitely want to show that from now on when someone asks if you promote to a queen everytime. Side note it took me the longest time to figure out why Bd2 didn’t work since it forces the king to the same square and you never move it again but of course it keeps the king from retreating back to its starting square (or C1) out of the knight checks
The first time i see staircase is from hikaru, he even say the same thing like you! 17:01 hikaru also said that "check check check" thingy. I really love all 3 puzzle btw
First puzzle If you push with the right pawn queen moves in response to the first move, take the same pawn as it's promoted, then that's checkmate. Same thing happens if you push with the left except the queen is in a weaker position Pushing left then push right pawn. Queen has to focus one which leaves the other to promote (as the queen is on the second to last row, not the last row after the pawn take. You want to push left since the right pawn into queen is an instant checkmate
after qf3 Nd5 black has the move bishop c8 then a8 (Q) or (R) both leads to draw after qf6 check only way to win after Bc8 is to Nf6 Qa3 , Nh7 Bb7, f8(Q) Qf8 , Nf8 and wining the end game
When I first starting watching this channel, I would look at this type of video in awe…now I’m beginning to get some of the moves correct. I appreciate all you do, Nelson.
Daniel: That's one of the great rewards of chess. It's all there for you to learn and improve with. Your opponent doesn't beat you in a sense -- you beat yourself. I like this SO much better than games like Magic The Gathering, where so much randomness spoils otherwise wonderful games -- to the extent I just didn't want to play in tournaments any more.
Wonderful. The staircase problem was simple enough that (re the hint about "staircase" in the video, that I was able to pretty easily solve it. The second one I was close, but I got stuck missing N-G6, but once you showed that I DID see the stalemate and figured out the required underpromotion sequence leading to the win. I don't recall seeing multiple underpromotions as a theme, not that I'm a big puzzle solver, more interested in, say, endgame themes. The first one was logical all the way, the main thing watching out for the checks. Of course, that theme made it easy (relatively speaking) to find the night sac on g6 at the end.
in the first puzzle: after white plays Nd5, black can play Bc8 if a8=Q, then Qf6+ and if white plays gxf6 or Nxf6 it’s stalemate since black’s bishop is pinned by the queen on a8. if white tries g6 after Qf6+, then Qg7+ and it’s perpetual check (after Qg7+, Kg5, Qe5+, Kh4, Qh2+, Kg5, Qe5+...) so after Bc8, a8=Q leads to a draw. if white plays f8=Q, then Qxf8# so after Bc8, white has to play Nf6: Nf6, Qa3, Nxh7, Qd6+, g6, Qf4+, Ng5, Qf6, Ne6 and black is left with no moves. (the knight can’t be captured by the queen or the bishop and the queen has no good checks) after black moves, white just plays f8=Q+ forcing the queen trade with Qxf8+ and Nxf8. after that it’s an easy win for white.
I'm definitely going to get this book. I just LOVE these endgame related puzzles, due to the concepts they illustrate. Chess is just so beautiful, and such problems are the pure art that shows that, IMO. I find the simplicity and purity of solving a difficult endgame using principles SO much more satisfying than finding some complex middle-game shot, and I always hated memorizing openings (which is why I never got good (above 2000), re rated tournament play. I was often way behind after the opening and would have to grind my way out for 70ish moves against a much weaker player. But if I could get to an interesting endgame against an expert or master, I had a decent shot. (Which would often blow them away after witnessing my opening. LOL)
7:25 why can’t knight to e3 work bc it’s defending the f1 square and the knight is defended by the bishop and the black bishop is light squared so it can’t kill either
4:20 what about g6? If the opponent takes then you can take with the other pawn and push that pawn to g7 with checkmate I don’t think I’m overlooking anything but if I did, please let me know.
nice, was able to figure out the first and last one, but the underpromotion one kind of got me since I was thinking to promote the e-pawn to a Queen (rather than a rook which wins) when that leads to stalemate, once I caught on, then the rest of the moves were not hard to find because it was all about controlling the a8-h1 diagonal from Black's light square Bishop. Incredible stuff! I mean, who isn't blown away from these mind boggling positions?! Chess is awesome, but not many people see it as such.
15:50 what bothers black to block knight with a pawn breaking the mate instead of a move with king. nothing would bother the black queen to interrupt the white one. no?
This is the most amazing chess video I have seen so far in youtube. I am not saying this lightly. I think the fact that you are not a Titled Player (as yet) but someone who is not very distant from intermediate/beginner players like us helps too. Like your calm approach. Your presentation style is amazing.
8:05 d2 is not that big of a deal to be honest. after Bishop d2 and King takes bishop you can play the Knight f3 and threat the king and then play Knight g1 sacrifice to free the white king
Why Q to c6+ is not a better move than a3 in puzzle 1 @3:06? Q can take position on a8 from there and bring the bishop to cover a8 in 2 moves, the knight needs 3 moves before helping his a pawn.. I realized after..--> a7 Qa4, f7 Qc6+, g6 Qc1+, f4 Qxf4mate.. haha I realized even after... Qc1+ is covered by Knight so if Qc6+ g6, and now black needs to also cover the threat g7 mate.. sorry Black, you lose
Puzzle 1. 1) Nd5 Qxf7 2) a8Q+ Qg8 Doesn’t that stop the threat? The knight can’t come in because of 3) Ne7 Qxa1 and for that matter, nothing else can because of the same move
Puzzle 1: why not g6 instead of Kb4? The Knight prevents Qc1 checkmate after pushing g pawn so white should be ok. Right ? Aldo, Kf6 instead of Ke7 seems to worlk, threatening h pawn capture and also preventing Q check on the 6th line. Right ?
Even though i saw the first one it was very cool. I love these super interesting chess puzzles youve been doing. The game is so clever at crazy depths.
Note: figured out why. But I think it's an interesting line. in puzzle #2 if you play bishop d2 and the king takes, you can check him with kf3, and then play kg3 to cover the checkmate threat. If the king tries to moves to capture the knight, he can take the first one but that'd be okay on its own. The issue is, this opens up black's bishop to have a checkmate threat on e4. Pretty interesting position, your knight needs to defend two checkmate threats but can't handle both at the same time. If he takes the bishop, pawn moves. If he doesn't, king moves for discovered mate.
The second one was mindblowing. I was getting it to the point where i need the knight to stop checkmate but didnt see it. Even though i knew one puzzle involved underpromotion. Also i promoted to a queen before since i didnt see the stalemate. I figured black just takes and then threatens checkmate. Last one was easy with the hint on the staircase. Fun video, keep it up :D
17:35 I had this same scenario recently except with pawns and not a bishop. But under a lot of time pressure I messed up the last move and ended up losing D:
In puzzle 3 , Rook should be in d8 And if bishop takes it we can finish our queen Or if they promote there queen we can play as you taught and put our rook in d1 amazing royal folk
I think it has to do something with the mindset. You know that there is a Solution to the Puzzle that ends in Mate or in win of Material. In a Game I don't assume that you I gain an advantage five moves after I saced a rook for a knight for example
got the first and third puzzle, almost got the second puzzle, i thought ng6 didn't work because after bishop bxg6, e8=R and bxe8, there would be no way to stop bc6 checkmate, i missed b8=n. got everything else in that puzzle though amazing puzzles 11/10 earned a sub
wait but what if you go to g8 with a bishop to threaten mate again instead? 10:28 You can't stop it with a horse like in a way you showed and you can just move bishop back and forth to force a draw (horse has to protect squares to which bishop can move to prevent checkmate)
Hey, I just wanted to let you know you're my favorite chess channel. You've the (he he) vibe that fits, it's easy to follow your way of thinking and everything is nicely explained, your puzzles are always interesting and their difficulty is just right. So yeah, cheers!
1: White's moves were very easy to find, but I missed that Black had more defencive moves. Once I saw them, it was very easy to see what White should play from there though. 2: This was a hard one. So many ideas! I got the first couple of moves right, but I missed the point from two different positions. Amazing stuff! 3. This was extremely easy, I solved it in about two minutes and got the right idea from the very beginning. Why? Becasue there were no sidelines. The only thing I spent extra time on was to see if Black had any alternative first moves.
No wait, I figured it out 🤦 If white promotes to queen on a8, this checks the black king and delivers a mate in 3. The black queen can't go to d6 because of the check.
i see a lot of praise for puzzle 2, but in 8:50, what if black goes for the horse? promoting wouldnt save the horse, and putting the king back in check would be complicated like, removing that knight alters the entire game plan
the first position shows the importance of knight sacs and deflection shots. after black is forced to play hxg6, white recaptures with the pawn, threatening g7 mate with an easy win. black's queen is overloaded.
I'm no master at Chess, but for puzzle 2, what about Knight to f3 for the first move? Knight goes f3, Black Pawn goes f1 -> promote, Knight moves to g2, and then black has a few options - take the Knight and get captured by the King, leaving them in a losing position due to White's two pawns that can promote, or don't take the Knight and do something else, which also results in a white promotion on the next move. Can someone tell me what's stopping this from being a viable move aside from the fact that it doesn't force mate?
I couldn't find the first pawn move but I did see that knight move immediately. I was looking at that queen and like "what can I do to either take or block it?" And the knight was right there and made sense
These puzzles are like therapy for me. I'm getting older and need to exercise my mind as well as my body. I push the pause button and try to work it out in my head. Mental gymnastics. Thank You Nelson.
i actually found the 2nd puzzle just because I had just seen the other underpromotion video of yours right before, thanks for doing such awesome videos !
At 10:37 what about bishop to d4? Now if the black bishop goes for the check mate we can take with the knight and if the pawn promote we can block the check with the bishop?
Puzzle 1: Mate in 11
Puzzle 2: Achieve a winning position in 8 moves
Puzzle 3: Mate in 15
Puzzle 2: don't die
@@imfullofsandwichesandimcom2301 more like Puzzle 2 : triple piece underpromotion for the win
Puzzle 2 is using the brain to the max
the second puzzle with the bishop sacrifice accepted, theres a knight fork of the pawn on f2. and after takes pawn and making a attack on the other pawn on h3. in this position i made, the bishop on h7 could take your other knight and defend the pawn but if you sacrifice your other knight for the pawn and bishop takes, white can just make a queen. ( Knight to d3 is the fork if you dont see it )
i was in a king-queen and it said mate in 59 lol
One under promotion is very rare in even studies, but three is mind blowing. Thanks Nelson for the videos!!!
Even better, you need to underpromote to 3 different pieces!
But you don't have to in order to win. Just move the bishop to d4 to block the attack...
@@komodo1132 how does that block the attack
@@rejireyfernandez274 If you move bishop to d4 instead of knight to e5 it can either capture the pawn or block the check should the pawn be promoted. No underpromotion necessary
wow, that 2nd puzzle is mind blowing with the triple underpromotions, very clever! Thank you Nelson for the video!
You got it!
In a puzzle i would get it but in a game i would 100% stalemate 😂
@@MyBiPolarBearMax lol true
@@ChessVibesOfficial in the first puzzle before the knight moves, black can just win if they play check
What's crazy to me too is that all 3 underpromotions were DIFFERENT. DAMN
The knight in the first puzzle also makes queen A4-C6-C1 checkmate impossible.
Qc1 would be checkmate, if it werent blacks queen. Qc1 doesnt even check the white king.
Yea i just thought why it wasnt playable
What happens if black takes the knight?
@@breadymcsaus7755 one of the pawns queens
Nelson, you do a great job with these puzzles. You're going to have more subscribers than you ever imagined as word of mouth gets around in the chess world. Great job.
Thanks a lot, Dudley, appreciate it!
i already had a staircase checkmate in a real game, that was very satisfying
Nice! If you're comfortable sharing the game, I might be interested in making a video on that game. =P chessvibesyt@gmail.com
That's cool.
Definitely share it mate
@@michaelthebigaussie I see what you did there
@@MrError3000YT what did he do
I really enjoy these puzzles, your detailed explanations and your very nice enthusiasm. You are doing us a favour - and yourself as well, which makes it even more fun to watch.
A great thanks.
The way you explain enthusiastically makes me comfortable and easy to understand chess more easily ... thank you Nelson
His content has transformed over the past few months. 1 year to about 2 months ago, he did tips, traps, and tricks videos. Now, he does puzzles.
8:00 the knight on e1 can go to d3 and fork too, if the king capture.
In puzzle 2, I felt so smart when I found the rook promotion in like 10 seconds, but those knight and bishops once were way beyond me. damn that was a cool puzzle
I found Nf1 instead
@@bat_0002 that hangs checkmate in 1
3:50 There is also another reason why the knight is placed there. Looking back at 3:00 black could have used the queen for checking white with a4 to c4. Following this white would have needed to go with pawn g5 to g6 leaving c1 for the black queen to deliever another check with following checkmate if the knight wouldnt be there to defend c1.
Hi I have question on puzzle 2. Wouldn't Ng3 win too? because.... Ng3-Be4-Ne4+Kc4-Nf2
In case you were wondering about 4:50 why Nc6 Qxc6 g6 Qf3 g7# doesn't work - this is because after g6 there is Qc1#. Brilliant geometry!
Puzzle 2 and your way to present is absolutetly wonderful. Thank you!
At 7:50, if Kxb2, why not Nd3+ to fork the king and pawn? Then Kc3, Nxf2, then probably Bxf5, at which point any of your pawns can safely promote, and their only checking square (Be4) is guarded by the knight on f2.
5:11 black might not have a lot of options but at least a good one. Queen a3 to d6 check. White loses if using the pawn g5 to defend, so the knight again jumps in from e7 to g6, leading to a more interesting endgame :) Besides its also worth to mention that instead of moving the queen to a4 at 2:33 , black could use bishop h3 to c8 following queen h4 to c4 depending on whites decision.
I was a 1596 at 8, and I recently got back into chess and those puzzles were so cool! Thank you Nelson!
4:53 couldnt black have taken the pawn on f7 with the queen and if the pawn on the left promotes do queen to g8 blocking it
and if the queen takes queen then its capture with h7 pawn and promote to a queen
3:06 . If the black queen wouldn't have gone to A3, and else would have gone to C6 dilivering a check hence the white pawn on G5 advances to G6 and then the black queen can go to c8 preventing both the white pawns from promoting and then if the white knight moves then C1 is a beautiful checkmate by the black queen after taking the white pawn which will be inbetween.
Puzzle 3: (from this point 15:12)
White queen b3, black queen c5, white queen b1 checkmate.
Or
White queen b3, black queen g3, white queen b1 checkmate.
Or
White queen b3, black queen b1, white queen b1 checkmate.
Or
White queen b3, black biship b2, white queen take b2, checkmate.
The ladder what ever wasn’t needed.
Do correct me if my wrong, I am a bit drunk.
Being a 1000 rated player means that I could actually find the solution to the 2nd puzzle, but I'd still probably lose/draw after that
Wow puzzle #2 blew my mind, truly amazing. Is there a name for that puzzle cause I definitely want to show that from now on when someone asks if you promote to a queen everytime.
Side note it took me the longest time to figure out why Bd2 didn’t work since it forces the king to the same square and you never move it again but of course it keeps the king from retreating back to its starting square (or C1) out of the knight checks
7:57 not to mention, if King captures Bishop, then Knight takes F2 and then you can promote
if king takes bishop, the knight can fork the king and pawn!
@@thefastmeow that's literally what I just said
@@kirillzakharov7336 😂😂😂
@@Dev_1907 nani??
The first time i see staircase is from hikaru, he even say the same thing like you!
17:01 hikaru also said that "check check check" thingy.
I really love all 3 puzzle btw
First puzzle
If you push with the right pawn queen moves in response to the first move, take the same pawn as it's promoted, then that's checkmate.
Same thing happens if you push with the left except the queen is in a weaker position
Pushing left then push right pawn. Queen has to focus one which leaves the other to promote (as the queen is on the second to last row, not the last row after the pawn take.
You want to push left since the right pawn into queen is an instant checkmate
after qf3 Nd5 black has the move bishop c8 then a8 (Q) or (R) both leads to draw after qf6 check
only way to win after Bc8 is to Nf6 Qa3 , Nh7 Bb7, f8(Q) Qf8 , Nf8 and wining the end game
When I first starting watching this channel, I would look at this type of video in awe…now I’m beginning to get some of the moves correct. I appreciate all you do, Nelson.
Daniel: That's one of the great rewards of chess. It's all there for you to learn and improve with. Your opponent doesn't beat you in a sense -- you beat yourself.
I like this SO much better than games like Magic The Gathering, where so much randomness spoils otherwise wonderful games -- to the extent I just didn't want to play in tournaments any more.
I get many moves correct but I'm still in an awe especially when I find them, those underpromotions were truly mindblowing!
The Staircase Maneuver is a common one and isn't confined to queens or requires all checks. You can find a detailed explanation on Wikipedia.
Wonderful. The staircase problem was simple enough that (re the hint about "staircase" in the video, that I was able to pretty easily solve it.
The second one I was close, but I got stuck missing N-G6, but once you showed that I DID see the stalemate and figured out the required underpromotion sequence leading to the win. I don't recall seeing multiple underpromotions as a theme, not that I'm a big puzzle solver, more interested in, say, endgame themes.
The first one was logical all the way, the main thing watching out for the checks. Of course, that theme made it easy (relatively speaking) to find the night sac on g6 at the end.
in the first puzzle:
after white plays Nd5, black can play Bc8
if a8=Q, then Qf6+ and if white plays gxf6 or Nxf6 it’s stalemate since black’s bishop is pinned by the queen on a8.
if white tries g6 after Qf6+, then Qg7+ and it’s perpetual check (after Qg7+, Kg5, Qe5+, Kh4, Qh2+, Kg5, Qe5+...)
so after Bc8, a8=Q leads to a draw.
if white plays f8=Q, then Qxf8#
so after Bc8, white has to play Nf6:
Nf6, Qa3, Nxh7, Qd6+, g6, Qf4+, Ng5, Qf6, Ne6 and black is left with no moves. (the knight can’t be captured by the queen or the bishop and the queen has no good checks)
after black moves, white just plays f8=Q+ forcing the queen trade with Qxf8+ and Nxf8.
after that it’s an easy win for white.
I'm definitely going to get this book. I just LOVE these endgame related puzzles, due to the concepts they illustrate. Chess is just so beautiful, and such problems are the pure art that shows that, IMO.
I find the simplicity and purity of solving a difficult endgame using principles SO much more satisfying than finding some complex middle-game shot, and I always hated memorizing openings (which is why I never got good (above 2000), re rated tournament play. I was often way behind after the opening and would have to grind my way out for 70ish moves against a much weaker player. But if I could get to an interesting endgame against an expert or master, I had a decent shot. (Which would often blow them away after witnessing my opening. LOL)
7:25 why can’t knight to e3 work bc it’s defending the f1 square and the knight is defended by the bishop and the black bishop is light squared so it can’t kill either
4:20 what about g6? If the opponent takes then you can take with the other pawn and push that pawn to g7 with checkmate
I don’t think I’m overlooking anything but if I did, please let me know.
5:42 I like how black's own bishop on h3 is preventing them from having checkmate, lol
5:58 Q can take on f7 and after a8+ Q can go to G8
Pawn will just take though and the black king will still be stuck
nice, was able to figure out the first and last one, but the underpromotion one kind of got me since I was thinking to promote the e-pawn to a Queen (rather than a rook which wins) when that leads to stalemate, once I caught on, then the rest of the moves were not hard to find because it was all about controlling the a8-h1 diagonal from Black's light square Bishop. Incredible stuff! I mean, who isn't blown away from these mind boggling positions?! Chess is awesome, but not many people see it as such.
Amazing !
Puzzle 1 : after 4. Nd5, the black move Bc8 makes the problem even trickier !
17:26 why is xe5 not a good move? it would completely eliminate the staircase, right?
15:50 what bothers black to block knight with a pawn breaking the mate instead of a move with king. nothing would bother the black queen to interrupt the white one. no?
This is the most amazing chess video I have seen so far in youtube. I am not saying this lightly. I think the fact that you are not a Titled Player (as yet) but someone who is not very distant from intermediate/beginner players like us helps too. Like your calm approach. Your presentation style is amazing.
Both of the last two puzzles are just the coolest I have ever seen. Three underpromotions and a staircase. WOW!
8:05 d2 is not that big of a deal to be honest. after Bishop d2 and King takes bishop you can play the Knight f3 and threat the king and then play Knight g1 sacrifice to free the white king
Why Q to c6+ is not a better move than a3 in puzzle 1 @3:06? Q can take position on a8 from there and bring the bishop to cover a8 in 2 moves, the knight needs 3 moves before helping his a pawn.. I realized after..--> a7 Qa4, f7 Qc6+, g6 Qc1+, f4 Qxf4mate.. haha I realized even after... Qc1+ is covered by Knight so if Qc6+ g6, and now black needs to also cover the threat g7 mate.. sorry Black, you lose
Puzzle 1.
1) Nd5 Qxf7 2) a8Q+ Qg8
Doesn’t that stop the threat? The knight can’t come in because of 3) Ne7 Qxa1 and for that matter, nothing else can because of the same move
Now we have a queen walk.
fascinating
Puzzle 1: why not g6 instead of Kb4? The Knight prevents Qc1 checkmate after pushing g pawn so white should be ok. Right ?
Aldo, Kf6 instead of Ke7 seems to worlk, threatening h pawn capture and also preventing Q check on the 6th line. Right ?
Wow, the second puzzle is tricky but I got it all right man... Thanks For The Video Nelson I feel genius to that.
12:43 what if A7 pawn bishop promotion it blocks the diagonal for the bishop to be able to checkmate and get a queen next move with the B7 pawn
at 17:29, can’t the pawn take the queen?
thats what i thought too
black pawns start at the row 7 they cant go backwards, the white pawns always start at the row 2
Even though i saw the first one it was very cool.
I love these super interesting chess puzzles youve been doing. The game is so clever at crazy depths.
really really great, i tried hard to solve the puzzle 2 but yea... don't try hard, try smart I'd learn from that.
self note 14:05 #3
Note: figured out why. But I think it's an interesting line.
in puzzle #2 if you play bishop d2 and the king takes, you can check him with kf3, and then play kg3 to cover the checkmate threat. If the king tries to moves to capture the knight, he can take the first one but that'd be okay on its own.
The issue is, this opens up black's bishop to have a checkmate threat on e4. Pretty interesting position, your knight needs to defend two checkmate threats but can't handle both at the same time. If he takes the bishop, pawn moves. If he doesn't, king moves for discovered mate.
The second one was mindblowing. I was getting it to the point where i need the knight to stop checkmate but didnt see it. Even though i knew one puzzle involved underpromotion. Also i promoted to a queen before since i didnt see the stalemate. I figured black just takes and then threatens checkmate. Last one was easy with the hint on the staircase. Fun video, keep it up :D
Yohan. Yes. To me, the staircase hint made it easy. Without that, I don't think I would have found the key sac theme to force the win.
17:35 I had this same scenario recently except with pawns and not a bishop. But under a lot of time pressure I messed up the last move and ended up losing D:
In puzzle 3 ,
Rook should be in d8
And if bishop takes it we can finish our queen
Or if they promote there queen we can play as you taught and put our rook in d1 amazing royal folk
That second one has a really cool sequence of events, and that third one....my god, that's dramatic and it's wonderful for that.
1:53 after the queen move isnt if white push the pawn to f7 the queen also can mate us with the same threat
when you find obscure checkmates easily in puzzles but cant find them in-game :(
I think it has to do something with the mindset. You know that there is a Solution to the Puzzle that ends in Mate or in win of Material.
In a Game I don't assume that you I gain an advantage five moves after I saced a rook for a knight for example
5:00 for the first puzzle why not go Knight to C7 to protect when the a7 pawn promoting, queen trade then your up a queen?
5:05 what if queen goes d6? You will have to defend, then he can go to d8 and block both pawns.
Edit: nevermind it doesn't work.
15:40 Nope, its not the only option. Black could also take the queen g1 to c1 check :)
Rxc1?
Wow, thoroughly enjoyed it! Thanks! 👌
got the first and third puzzle,
almost got the second puzzle, i thought ng6 didn't work because after bishop bxg6, e8=R and bxe8, there would be no way to stop bc6 checkmate, i missed b8=n. got everything else in that puzzle though
amazing puzzles 11/10 earned a sub
To start the second puzzle, I wanted to say Bc3, but that allows mate in four with:
...fxe1=Q+, Bg1, Bxf5, e8=Q, Be4+, Qxe4, Qxe4#.
wait but what if you go to g8 with a bishop to threaten mate again instead? 10:28
You can't stop it with a horse like in a way you showed and you can just move bishop back and forth to force a draw (horse has to protect squares to which bishop can move to prevent checkmate)
Nf4 protecting Bd5. If bishop goes back then rook promotion, so there's no draw
3:52 i litreally said it, without understanding and i didn't even know it blocks queen from capturing pawn in f8
Hey, I just wanted to let you know you're my favorite chess channel. You've the (he he) vibe that fits, it's easy to follow your way of thinking and everything is nicely explained, your puzzles are always interesting and their difficulty is just right. So yeah, cheers!
question: at 10:14 cant the knight at e5 go to f3 or does that not work?
1: White's moves were very easy to find, but I missed that Black had more defencive moves. Once I saw them, it was very easy to see what White should play from there though.
2: This was a hard one. So many ideas! I got the first couple of moves right, but I missed the point from two different positions. Amazing stuff!
3. This was extremely easy, I solved it in about two minutes and got the right idea from the very beginning. Why? Becasue there were no sidelines. The only thing I spent extra time on was to see if Black had any alternative first moves.
Puzzle 1: why can't the knight on b4 be taken? If a pawn promotes to queen, then Qd6+ will lead to checkmate after g6, Qf4++
Exactly! It's been driving me crazy! Can't figure this out.
No wait, I figured it out 🤦
If white promotes to queen on a8, this checks the black king and delivers a mate in 3. The black queen can't go to d6 because of the check.
17:29 could the pawn not takeand stop this all?
i see a lot of praise for puzzle 2, but in 8:50, what if black goes for the horse? promoting wouldnt save the horse, and putting the king back in check would be complicated
like, removing that knight alters the entire game plan
The second puzzle is absolutely amazing!
4:53 What about B-c8 for black instead of Q-a3?
one of possible combination for second puzzle 1> Bd2 KxB2
2> Nf3+ Ke2
3> Ng3+ Kfx3
4> Qe8
white wins
At 5:01, the move I expected was Nb6, because then we can get a queen on a8 and it's defended.
Wouldn't that be good too?
If you do that, you lose in 2 moves after Qd6+.
@@smerriman you're right.
Thanks!
to be honest, 2nd puzzle after you sacrifice the bishop on the "incorrect route" you could technically go Nf3 to check again right?
the first position shows the importance of knight sacs and deflection shots. after black is forced to play hxg6, white recaptures with the pawn, threatening g7 mate with an easy win. black's queen is overloaded.
16:25 qf7 ka1 qf6 ka2 qe6 ka1 qe5 ka2 qd5 ka1 qd4 ka2 qc4 ka1 qc3 and it's impossible to stop mate
8:05 if he takes the bishop knight can go to Knf3 and then go to kng1
I'm no master at Chess, but for puzzle 2, what about Knight to f3 for the first move? Knight goes f3, Black Pawn goes f1 -> promote, Knight moves to g2, and then black has a few options - take the Knight and get captured by the King, leaving them in a losing position due to White's two pawns that can promote, or don't take the Knight and do something else, which also results in a white promotion on the next move. Can someone tell me what's stopping this from being a viable move aside from the fact that it doesn't force mate?
I couldn't find the first pawn move but I did see that knight move immediately. I was looking at that queen and like "what can I do to either take or block it?" And the knight was right there and made sense
Puzzle 2, first move: Knight to E3: «Am I a joke to you?»
Amazing! Thank you!
3:30 pawn to G7 checkmate
At time stamp 17:30 puzzle 3, BLACK CAN TAKE THE QUEEN WITH THEIR PAWN
These puzzles are like therapy for me. I'm getting older and need to exercise my mind as well as my body. I push the pause button and try to work it out in my head. Mental gymnastics. Thank You Nelson.
1st and 2nd puzzle was amazing
It’s all fun and games till you premove the staircase mate and he blocks with the bishop
😂😂
In puzzle 2, what will you do if black took his bishop from g6 to d3 after you promote your pawn to bishop?
He might have an upper hand.
I’ve been watching your content for a few days now, and I was able to solve the first one! Your puzzle content is wonderful.
Postion 2 was super amazing oh my
i actually found the 2nd puzzle just because I had just seen the other underpromotion video of yours right before, thanks for doing such awesome videos !
I think in puzzle 2, bishop can go to D2. White takes it with King. Knight to F3, check. If king moves right, then E pawn advances and checks.
5:11 why can't black check mate with
Qd6+
G6 Qd2+
F4 QXf4#?
6:50 actually 4 threats of checkmate 😜
😂 Good point!
Nice! But the Rook and Queen movements don't really change each other much in the position, so it's generalized as 2 threats.
Your analyses are fantastic
I'm just curious,@7:20 what would have happened if you played bishop to e3
At 10:37 what about bishop to d4? Now if the black bishop goes for the check mate we can take with the knight and if the pawn promote we can block the check with the bishop?
Qg2/qf3# at the end
@@frostypotatos180 yes,thanks.
Qg2# 0-1.