But I do have a question regarding chess that I'm hoping you know the answer to, Assuming the board is like this, which would happen here and there quite commonly, what's to stop the move Pa6?
Sorry, I have a hard time understanding the letters and numbers thing. Could you explain it through the use of words. I'd appreciate it.
With only one piece, I don't think there's anything you can do to stop it. The best thing to do would be to take the knight, since it's worth more points than a pawn.
The key piece of advice a pro chess player would never tell you is to never do the same play twice. If you keep using the same mix of combinations to win, eventually someone will figure out a way to bypass it, then your whole game is lost. Try to make your moves more random but still controlled. This going with any competitive sport. For example in MMA if you keep using the same move your opponent will notice and figure out how to beat you, rending your training for that match pointless.
Ah, I looked it up. Kasparov was disqualified from this match after they found high levels of dihydrogen monoxide in his blood. Don't do drugs kids
Well boring and confusing are both subjective, so I suppose it just means your mind is not advanced enough to comprehend it