Can chess end in a draw?

A draw occurs in chess when neither player wins nor loses—the game ends in a tie. Either of the two players can ask for a draw, and after the game is tied, each player wins half a point.
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Is there ever a draw in chess?

A stalemate is a special type of draw in the game of chess that occurs when the chess player who has to move cannot make any legal moves to a safe square but is also not in check. Stalemate typically ends the game with a draw—a scenario in which there is no way for either player to win the game.
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Why chess ends in a draw?

There are cases where one player has more pieces than the opponent toward the end of the game. However, that is not always enough to win because some combinations of pieces cannot force checkmate. The game is declared a draw whenever both sides do not have the "sufficient material" to force a checkmate.
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How can a chess game end?

There are three main ways to win or lose a chess game: checkmate, resignation and timeout. Check out the games and videos below for examples.
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Can chess end in a stalemate?

Stalemate is one of the drawing rules of chess. It happens when the player who has to move has no legal moves available The game then ends immediately in a tie, and each player is awarded half a point. The diagram below shows a stalemate that frequently occurs for beginner players.
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Rules of Chess #14 Draws - Elliott Neff Chess4Life



Why is stalemate not a win?

Just like with Checkmate, in a Stalemate the King cannot move—he has no Safe Squares. In fact, a Stalemate happens when there are no legal moves, just like Checkmate. The only difference is that since the King isn't threatened, the attacker can't claim a win and the game is declared a Draw!
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How do you win chess and not draw?

Give them two or three squares to move between and use a check to cover all of them - say leave them a diagonal and check with a bishop or knight, or leave them a horizontal/vertical line and check with a rook or queen. omnipaul wrote: ... You can't stalemate them if you're checking them every move.
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Is perfect chess a draw?

A perfect game of chess is always a draw. This is what I have discovered when matching Houdini against Houdini. If you match a very strong player against an equally strong player, the result will likely be a draw. But if you matched houdini against Junior, Junior would win every game.
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What is a missed win in chess?

In chess.com definition, a "Missed Win" is "a move was missed that would have won material or the game", and a "Blunder" is "a very bad move that could lose material or end the game". In this case, that move was "missed win" a pawn, but blunder and lose the game.
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Is chess a completed game?

Chess is a zero-sum game of limited decisions. The number of possible moves at any given point, and the number of possible states of the board, are all finite.
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Can chess be never ending?

Under the standard FIDE rules, no that would not be possible. The 50 move rule states that if a pawn is not moved or a piece captured within 50 moves, then a drawn may be claimed. So once a game gets down to a lone King, there is a mathematical definite limit to how long the game can go on.
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Can you tie in chess?

A draw occurs in chess when neither player wins nor loses—the game ends in a tie. Either of the two players can ask for a draw, and after the game is tied, each player wins half a point.
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How often does chess end in a draw?

In chess games played at the top level, a draw is the most common outcome of a game: of around 22,000 games published in The Week in Chess played between 1999 and 2002 by players with a FIDE Elo rating of 2500 or above, 55 percent were draws.
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Is chess a forced draw?

The only way to force a draw is to get a triple repetition of position and claim the draw, 50 moves with no captures or pawn moves and claim the draw, or capture everything so there is insufficient material for mate when time runs out. You could also "force" a stalemate.
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Which is the only piece that can't check a king?

The king may capture an enemy piece in a move to get out of check, as long as the piece is not protected. Blocking the check. This only works if the checking piece is a queen, rook, or bishop and there is at least one empty square in the line between the checking piece and the checked king.
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What is an inaccuracy in chess?

An inaccuracy is a minor error, typically one that doesn't drastically change the evaluation of the position. As a contrived example, if you have mate in 4, but you play a different move and it takes you 10 moves to mate your opponent, you have made an inaccuracy.
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What is a mistake in chess?

Broadly speaking, in chess, a mistake changes the evaluation of a position, while a blunder changes the result of the game. To elaborate: If a player, having the advantage, makes a move that loses the advantage but not necessarily the game, he is said to have made a mistake.
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Why is White better in chess?

In chess, there is a general consensus among players and theorists that the player who makes the first move (White) has an inherent advantage. Since 1851, compiled statistics support this view; White consistently wins slightly more often than Black, usually scoring between 52 and 56 percent.
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Why White always moves first in chess?

A beginner of chess learns the power of “white first” very quickly. They will see that an opponent will prefer the white pieces if given a choice. They feel a sense of empowerment even when they are playing a stronger opponent. For this reason, players who play white may be more motivated to win.
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What percent of grandmaster games are drawn?

Grandmasters have a draw rate approaching 60% or more in their games with other GMs, but that has nothing to do with lower rated players. To win a game, the opponent must make mistakes - more than one, unless it's a really bad one.
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How can queen and king not be stalemate?

The easiest way to avoid this stalemate is to make sure the enemy king has at least two safe squares before trapping it in a corner. For instance, if the White Queen were on d7, the Black king could harmlessly shuffle back and forth between a8 and b8.
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What are illegal moves in chess?

What is an Illegal Move in Chess? In Chess, an illegal move is when a piece moves outside of the boundaries of its defined abilities. Illegal moves include ones that are otherwise legal but expose that player's King to check. It is also an illegal chess move to leave your king in check.
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Is a stalemate a tie?

Stalemate is a tie game. Also known as a Draw. 3 ways to stalemate: insufficient material (not enough firepower), no legal moves, and three-fold repetition. Well, there's one more – 50 king moves with no other legal moves – but this almost never occurs outside of scholastic tournaments.
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Is it better to stalemate or lose?

In chess, a stalemate occurs when one side cannot make a legal move, or in other words, any move they could make would place their king into check. The current rules of chess say when this happens, the game ends in a draw.
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