Bogatyrchuk vs. Dzagurov, U.S.S.R 1939
Black to move and mate in 4r1b1k2N/6pp/p7/1p1P4/3P2nq/1BP4P/PP1Nn1P1/R1B2R1K b – - 0 100yes
Puzzles, Bogatyrchuk, Dzagurov
White to Move Mate In 6
Try your luck with this one… White to move, mate in 6. Post your solutions in the comment section. good luck!3b4/1p2k1pp/p1p5/1qPp1QP1/1P1Pp2P/P3P2B/6K1/8 w – - 1 3600yes
Puzzle
White to Move Mate in 3
White to Move Mate in 38/R7/4kPP1/3ppp2/3B1P2/1K1P1P2/8/8 w KQkq – 0 100yes
Mate in 3
This position is from Kasparov vs Elmar Magerramov, USSR, 1982. Kasparov checkmated Elmar in 3 moves. Can you do that?
3r1r1k/1p3p1p/p2p4/4n1NN/6bQ/1BPq4/P3p1PP/1R5K w – - 0 100yes
Magerramov, USSR
White to move Mate in 3
This problem appears in Edward Lasker’s book Chess For Fun and Chess For Blood (or something along those lines). White is to play and mate in three.
Despite the paucity of moves available, this problem is extremely difficult to solve.
Chess Game Editor
The new Chess Game Editor is working…
This editor will allow you to Analyze games by setting up positions, or imputing PGN…
http://www.quantumgambitz.com/blognew/editor.htm
Enjoy!!!!
How many different ways can a chess game unfold?
Almost nothing looks more orderly than chess pieces before a match starts. The first move, however, begins a spiral into chaos. After both players move, 400 possible board setups exist. After the second pair of turns, there are 197,742 possible games, after 3 moves 121 million. At every turn, players chart a progressively more distinctive path, and each games evolves into one that has probably never been played before.
According to Jonathan Schaeffer, a computer scientist at the University of Alberta who demonstrates A.I. using games, “The possible number of chess games is so huge that no one will invest the effort to calculate the exact number”
Some have estimated it at around 10100,000. Out of those, 10120 games are “typical” :about 40 moves long with an average of 30 choices per move.
There are only 1015 total hairs on all the human heads in the world, 1023 grains of sand on the Earth, and about 1081 atoms in the universe. The number of typical chess games in many times as great as all those numbers multiplied together – and impressive feat for 32 wooden pieces lined up on a board.
Source: Popular Science January 2011…

