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Encyclopedia > Chess pieces

In chess, each player has one of two equivalent sets of pieces of different colors. Each set has six types of pieces:

From left to right: King, Queen, Bishop, Rook, Knight, and Pawn
Enlarge
From left to right: King, Queen, Bishop, Rook, Knight, and Pawn
  • 1 King
  • 1 Queen
  • 2 Rooks
  • 2 Bishops
  • 2 Knights
  • 8 Pawns

And each piece moves in a different pattern.

  • the rook moves orthogonally to the players (forward, backward, left or right) and any number of squares
  • the bishop moves diagonally and any number of squares
  • the queen moves orthogonally or diagonally and any number of squares
  • the king moves orthogonally or diagonally and only one square at a time
  • the knight moves in an "L"-shape (two spaces in one direction and one space orthogonally to it)
  • the pawn can only move away one space* from player that owns it

Other pieces, not used in conventional chess but used in chess variants or certain kinds of chess problems, are known as fairy pieces.


Chess set colors are usually black & white, brown & cream, black & red, or green & white.


Chess pieces used for play are usually 3-D figurines that are taller than they are wide. For example, a set of pieces designed for a board with 2″ (5 cm) squares will typically have a king around 3.75″ (9.5 cm) tall. They are available in a variety of designs, with the most well-known "Staunton design" which is named after Howard Staunton (a 19th century English chess player) and designed by Nathaniel Cook.


The variation of designs available is broad from highly abstract representations to themed designs such as those which emulate the drawings from the works of Lewis Carroll or modern treatments such as Star Trek or The Simpsons. Themed designs are often intended for display purposes rather than for actual play.


On computers, chess pieces are often 2-D symbols on a 2-D board, although some programs have fancier 3-D graphics engines with more traditional designs of chess pieces. In essence, nearly any object can be used to represent a particular piece, if agreed to by both players.


For games played at the top level, pieces made of wood are common but for lower-level games or very large tournaments, plastic sets are more common. Although the physical color of chess pieces may vary, the lighter color is called "white" while the darker color is called "black."


Some small magnetic sets, designed to be compact and/or for travel, have pieces more like those used in Shogi and Xiangqi — each piece being a similar flat token, with a symbol drawn on it to show which piece it is.


* the pawn can move one or two spaces if it hasn't moved from its original square.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Fairy chess piece - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1982 words)
A fairy chess piece or unorthodox chess piece is a chess piece not used in conventional chess, but used in certain chess variants and some chess problems.
In shatranj, a forerunner to chess, the pieces later replaced by the bishop and queen were also leapers: the alfil was a (2,2) leaper (moving exactly two squares diagonally in any direction), and the fers a (1,1) leaper (that is, it can move one square diagonally in any direction).
There are three riders in orthodox chess: the rook can move an unlimited number of (1,0) cells and is therefore a (1,0) rider; the bishop is a (1,1) rider; and the queen is a (1,1) or (1,0) rider.
Rules of chess - Chess rules for playing chess (2040 words)
Each chess piece has a defined starting point or square with the dark chess pieces aligned on one side of the board and the light pieces on the other.
Remember, as per the chess rules, the queen is always on her own color while the king is always on the opposite color.
Neither of the chess pieces involved, your king or rook that is being castled, have been moved during the chess game.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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