pa helpp po guysss plss noww
thankyouu smmm
Share
pa helpp po guysss plss noww
thankyouu smmm
Sign Up to our social questions and Answers Engine to ask questions, answer people’s questions, and connect with other people.
Login to our social questions & Answers Engine to ask questions answer people’s questions & connect with other people.
Answer:
1. Queen
2. king
3. bishop
4. knight
5 rook
6 pawn
7 chess board
8 timer
Explanation:
Yan po Ang sagot correct me if I wrong ☺️
Answer:
1. King - The king is the most important piece in chess, and chess strategy often revolves around finding ways to protect your king while threatening your opponent’s. The king can move in any direction, albeit only one square at a time.
2. Queen - The modern queen is the most valuable piece in the game of chess, and a key component in countless chess strategies. In material terms, the queen is valued at nine points—equivalent in value to three minor pieces, nearly as valuable as both rooks, and more valuable than every one of your pawns.
3. Bishop - The bishop may move any number of spaces diagonally in any direction. That means that a player’s bishop will always remain in the same color in which it started.
4. Knight - The knight has unusual movement rules in a chess game. The knight’s ability to jump over other pieces makes it especially valuable, like in games where the center of the board is taken up with pawns that obstruct the movement of other pieces.
The knight is the only piece that can skip over other pieces as part of its normal move.
The knight must always move in an L shape: two spaces in one direction, and then one space perpendicular, or vice versa.
5. Rook - A rook may move along either ranks or files (that is, horizontally or vertically) any number of occupied spaces per move. Like other non-knight pieces, the rook moves through unoccupied spaces and captures an opposing piece by occupying its space.
6. Pawn - The way pawns are arranged on the board is called the “pawn structure.” On the first move, a pawn may move forward one or two spaces. On all subsequent turns, they may only move one space. Pawns can only capture pieces while moving forward and diagonally, either to the left or the right. (In certain cases, it may also be possible for a pawn to capture en passant.) If a pawn makes it to the opposite side of the board, it may be promoted into any other piece (except the king).
7. Chessboard
8. Timer? (not sure about this one tho)
Explanation:
I hope this helps.