Hey, /tg/; you're welcome to join me watching some chess here:
https://chess24.com/en/watch/live-tournaments/your-next-move-grand-chess-tour-2016
>playing a game that doesn't involve rolling dice
>>47854958
I don't know the fancy numbers or anything, but if the further right white knight moves down beneath the black knight it is checkmate.
>>47855496
I think you're supposed to be the black player getting out of the predicament you're in
>>47855496
Can't the black king take that white pawn next to him then?
>>47855496
If Ne2 then black plays Kxc2 (king moves one space down). What do you play now?
#2 in this context means "White to checkmate black in 2 turns for each player."
>>47854958
The answer is 1 Nxd4.
If ... Kxd4, then
2. Qh8 is mate.
If pretty much anything else,
2. Bb2 is mate.
And may I say, I hate puzzles like this. White's position is overwhelmingly advantageous, and there's really no compelling need from the position to do a mate in 2 as opposed to mate in 3 or 4.
>>47855330
Chess is a traditional board game. Fuck off
>>47855330
Oooh, is it time for the next randomness fight already?
>>47855330
>being such a scrub that you can't consistently roll the number you need
Skill, not luck.
>>47856487
I like directmate problems totally regardless of whether they're advantageous for white.
There are a good amount of problems and endgame studies at the 64-Square Problem Tour at http://www.uschess.org/content/view/8199/436