I guess the trap is that if white goes for Queen, black moves the bishop to take the pawn by the king. That bishop is protected by the knight nearby and forces the king to move. The only place the king can move is up. The other bishop is then moved to force a check mate. Did I get it right?
Writing it out,
Bxd8 Bxf2
Ke2 (only move) Bg4#
Since the king is in check and the light squared bishop covers f3, the dark squared bishop covers e1 and e3, the knight covers d2 and f2, and the rest are blocked by white's pieces
Took me a while to understand the notation, now I know you're indicating that the B indicates a Bishop is moving from somewhere to D8. Ok, we're on the same page. Thanks for the confirmation
Yeah learning chess notation looks confusing at first but it's straight forward and can make a whole pile of moves look very small
It's called "algebraic notation".
that's one way, sure.
Is there another way in shorter turns or the same amount?
my guess would be moving the black bishop one to the left to place king into check, and then moving the other bishop into position. I also had an idea for castling and then using horse-castle placement for checkmate, but that's more than 2 moves
Doesn't that leave E3 open though?
Not only that, but Bxd8 Bb4 allows c3 and white survives.
I was gonna say Black captures the bishop with their king
Why take a screenshot of an image?
Maybe to remove metadata? Idk. Even so could’ve still cropped it
What opening is that? Legal's mate is fun to go for (1350 blitz on lichess), but I only ever reach that kind of position as white.
It's the Stafford Gambit, made popular by Eric Rosen. It has a lot of different traps and is actually quite fun to play as black.
AnarchyChess
Holy hell
Other chess communities:
!Chess@lemmy.ml
!chessbeginners@sh.itjust.works