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chess moves
Posted in 
Chess
chess moves
Posted in 
Chess
chess moves
Does any body know how to do chess moves???
ya .. dress up as chess pieces and get a mammath group of you to walk down the street shouting something like, "We are not nerds!"

or you can go to the game and click on a piece (hold click), and drag it to the next available spot .. ;)

hope that helps .. :p

~AJ
Not that kind of moves. I'm talking about moves that you can use in games like 
Fools mate
and 
 En Epassent
!!!But thanks for tip about dressing up as a chess piece! I might do it for Halloween!!!
sorry i'm not a really good chess player .. just basics :)

so i have no idea what you are talking about :p

~AJ
Man, I have no clue what "fool mate" is...But about "En passant" capture I tell you this. Consider the following situation: Your opponent's pawn (A) is at its initial spot. Your pawn (B) is on the spot located on the next vertical line and two horizontal lines ahead of your opponent's. So, if A moved one spot, B could take it on your turn. But, B makes a double-spot move (pawns at their initial spot can make double-spot moves, ya know, but this feature might not avoid a capture by an enemy pawn, as you will conclude), in order to avoid B's attack. So, B can take A as if it had moved only one spot ahead. THIS is called 
EN PASSANT CAPTURE
. You must perform it immediately, or you'll lose the opportunity.
Fool's mate is a special case of checkmate in the game of chess. It consists of the moves (in algebraic notation): 

1.f3 e5 
2.g4 Qh4#

There are a few slight variations on the pattern - White might play f4 instead of f3 or move the g-pawn before the f-pawn, and black may play e6 instead of e5.
Even among rank beginners, the mate almost never occurs in practice, but is notable as being the shortest possible game ending in checkmate. Shorter games have occurred in the professional world when a player resigns, agrees to a draw, or forfeits due to not showing up.

he en passant rule applies when a player moves a pawn two squares forward and an opposing pawn could have captured it if it had only moved one square forward. The rule states that the opposing pawn may then capture the pawn as if it had only moved one square forward. The resulting position is the same as if the pawn had only moved one square forward and then the opposing pawn had captured as normal. En passant must be done on the very next turn, or the right to do so is lost. The move is unusual in that it is the only occasion in chess in which a piece captures but does not move to the square of the captured piece.

The term en passant is French for "in passing".

I think that OP also is looking for Openings in chess, and if that is the case he/she should check out these sites:


http://www.chessgames.com/perl/explorer



http://www.eudesign.com/chessops/


http://www.csm.astate.edu/~wpaulsen/chess/intro.htm


http://www.eusa.ed.ac.uk/societies/chess/ChessTutor/openings.html


Also, here are some chess lessons:


http://www.entertainmentjourney.com/index3.htm