Question:
how to win a chess game in 2 moves?
bigt
2008-09-06 07:42:08 UTC
how to win a chess game in 2 moves?
Eleven answers:
anonymous
2008-09-06 08:11:33 UTC
Fool's mate, also known as the "two-move checkmate," is the quickest possible checkmate in the game of chess. One example consists of the moves



1. f3 e5

2. g4 Qh4#

leading to the position shown at this link:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fools_mate
?
2016-11-01 08:53:41 UTC
definite! you may win by utilising checkmate in 2 strikes, as Black, yet once you're White, you decide on a minimum of three strikes. The loser must be particularly inept to fall headlong into this mate, of direction a million. f4 e6 2. g4?? Qh4++ yet for White to realize the comparable thought, Black has to have made the two deadly pawn strikes before White can pull his queen ask your self on him a million. e4 f5 2. Nc3 g5?? 3. Qh5++
anonymous
2008-09-06 12:39:29 UTC
Yup, Captain Kirk got it right.



Amazing that Spock was able to beat him so often.
©2009
2008-09-06 07:46:14 UTC
I'm not sure that's possible. The King's Gambit requires 4 and it's the quickest I know of and the opponent must also cooperate a little..but then again, I'm far from being a chess expert.
anonymous
2008-09-06 11:04:01 UTC
Kirk nailed it



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vFKxKviVL1I

for video
mikey
2008-09-06 07:46:56 UTC
1. pull knife

2. stab opponent

It is somewhat crude, however, it has never failed...variations include the use of a hammer, broken bottle or sidearm, it is your choice, however, I should warn you, opponents become harder and harder to find...
anonymous
2008-09-06 07:44:56 UTC
pick up a gun

shoot your opponent



*ha the person above me had the same idea!
anonymous
2008-09-06 07:44:51 UTC
Shoot your opponent. Then you deffinetely win.

But seriously it's impossible.
anonymous
2008-09-06 07:47:22 UTC
Sure you can, if your last two moves are check and checkmate.
evrettbgo
2008-09-06 07:59:58 UTC
not possible
anonymous
2008-09-06 07:45:10 UTC
that sounds...impossible


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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