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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Does perfect chess end in a draw?

Chess players and theoreticians have long debated whether, given perfect play by both sides, the game should end in a win for White or a draw. Since approximately 1889, when World Champion Wilhelm Steinitz addressed this issue, the consensus has been that a perfectly played game would end in a draw (futile game).
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Is chess theoretically a draw?

Article 5 of the 2018 FIDE Laws of Chess gives the basic ways a game may end in a draw; more complicated ways are detailed in Article 9: (Schiller 2003:26–29). Stalemate – if the player on turn has no legal move but is not in check, this is stalemate and the game is automatically a draw.
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What's considered 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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Who wins chess with perfect play?

'perfect play' should result in a draw, according to analysis that has been done. It is unknown if "perfect play" yields a draw, a win for black, or a win for white. Those that say it "should", or "more than likely" have any of the three results, are guessing.
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The Best Draw In Chess History



Can a computer always win at chess?

Chess computers are now so strong that they are practically unbeatable. It is highly unlikely that even the greatest human players would beat a computer playing at a full capacity. This is because a computer can analyze millions of possibilities and compare them against each other within seconds.
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Which is the least powerful piece on a chess board?

The chess piece that holds the lowest theoretical value is the pawn. They are considered the least powerful because they can only move one square forward at a time. The pawn is the first line of defense that everybody has on the board and is worth only 1 point.
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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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Is stalemate a draw?

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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Why is chess always a draw?

A stalemate is when a player has no legal moves, but their king is not in check. This is what happened in your game, and in chess it's considered a draw. Despite your material advantage, you didn't convert it into a checkmate, and so you didn't win. (If you had played Rc6 as your last move instead, you would have won.)
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Why does chess say draw when I won?

The players may simply agree to a draw and stop playing. There are not enough pieces on the board to force a checkmate (example: a king and a bishop vs. a king) A player declares a draw if the same exact position is repeated three times (though not necessarily three times in a row)
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Why is my chess game 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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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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Does Black play draw?

Black can draw with careful play, whereas white can draw even after making a minor mistake. That's all it really boils down to.
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Are there infinite chess games?

no, because of the 50-move rule, there is a limit to the number of possible moves in a game. the possibilities for each number of moves has to be finite, because there are only 32 pieces and 64 squares. so the number of possible chess games is finite.
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What is en passant in chess?

En passant (French for 'in passing') is a special chess rule that gives pawns the option to capture a pawn which has just passed it. Here's an example: Black has just moved his pawn forward two spaces, and landed alongside the white pawn.
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What is no legal move in chess?

What Is 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.
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Who invented chess?

Chess was invented in India around the 8th century. Then it was known as chatrang, and changed over the centuries by the Arabs, Persians and then ultimately the medieval Europeans, who changed the pieces' names and appearances to resemble the English court.
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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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Is stalemate a dumb rule?

Stalemate is valid for both players. Is the same as when playing OTB you have to move a touched figure, even if this means losing the game. This is not unfair, only the rule of the game, valid for both players.
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How can a king and queen avoid a 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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Why can't the king take the queen?

the king can't get to the queen on his own, though, because the queen controls all the squares needed for the king to move right next to her. so the only way a king can take the opposing queen is if the queen moves right next to it.
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Is a queen worth two rooks?

As a general rule, two rooks are better than one queen. We usually assimilate the queen to nine pawns, while the pair of rooks is worth ten.
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Why are rooks better than bishops?

A rook is generally more valuable than a bishop because: it can reach all squares of the board, while a bishop can stay only on squares of the same color.
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