Common Tactical Motifs in Chess

Fork

Definition

A fork is a single move that attacks two or more enemy pieces or key squares simultaneously. Because the opponent can only respond to one threat per move, a fork often wins material.

Usage

Knights and pawns are the most frequent forking pieces, but any piece—even the king—can fork.

Examples

  • Classic knight fork: 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Nf6 4. Ng5 d5 5. exd5 Nxd5? 6. Nxf7!—White attacks the queen on d8 and rook on h8.
  • Carlsen – Aronian, Wijk aan Zee 2012: …Nd3+ forking king and rook decided the end-game.

Interesting Facts

Children are often taught the “family fork,” a knight check that also attacks both enemy rooks—a tactic that can appear even at master level.

Pin

Definition

A pin occurs when a piece cannot move without exposing a more valuable piece (or the king) behind it to capture.

Types of Pins

  • Absolute pin – the pinned piece cannot legally move because it would expose the king.
  • Relative pin – moving the piece is legal but usually loses material.

Historic Moment

Fischer – Benko, U.S. Championship 1963: 19.Bg5! pinned the f6-knight and led to a crushing kingside attack.

Tip

When you create a pin, reinforce it; when you are pinned, break it by interposing, counter-pinning, or moving the king.

Skewer

Definition

A skewer is the opposite of a pin: a more valuable piece is in front; when it moves, a less valuable piece behind it is captured.

Usage

Long-range pieces (bishops, rooks, and queens) execute skewers along files, ranks, or diagonals.

Example

Capablanca – Janowsky, New York 1916: 31.Rd8+! skewered Black’s queen to his back-rank rook.

Fun Fact

The term comes from cooking—think of sliding pieces off a roast skewer!

Discovered Attack

Definition

When a piece moves away, it “discovers” an attack from a long-range piece behind it.

Discovered Check

If the discovered attack is a check on the king, the tactic is even more potent.

Famous Game

Kasparov – Topalov, Wijk aan Zee 1999: 24. Rxd4!! unleashed a queen discovered attack that culminated in a brilliant mating net.

Double Check

Definition

A special form of discovered check in which both the moved piece and the uncovering piece give check. The only legal reply is to move the king.

Example

Smyslov – Botvinnik, World Championship 1954, Game 10: 28.Bxh7+!! Kg7 29.Bh6+ Kxh7 30.Ng5+! produced a decisive double check.

Decoy (Attraction)

Definition

Forcing a defending piece or the king onto a square where it becomes vulnerable.

Illustration

“Lolli mate” often begins with the decoy 1.Qxh7+ Kxh7 2.Rh3+ to lure the king onto h7.

Deflection

Definition

Forcing a key defender away from the square, file, or diagonal it is guarding.

Example

Karpov – Unzicker, Nice Olympiad 1974: 23.Rxd5! deflected Black’s queen from the defense of f7, leading to mate.

Overload (Over-extended Defender)

Definition

A defender is given too many simultaneous duties, and by adding one more threat you force a collapse.

Classic Case

In Tarrasch – Schlechter, Ostend 1907, Black’s queen was overloaded guarding both f7 and c7; Tarrasch’s 25.Qxf7+! won.

Removing the Defender

Definition

Capture (or distract) a piece that protects something important—square, piece, or mating line.

Tip

This motif often appears in conjunction with forks or mating nets; look for loose defenders.

Clearance (or Clearing Sacrifice)

Definition

Sacrificing or moving a piece to vacate a line, square, or diagonal for another piece’s action.

Example

Tal – Benko, Candidates 1959: 21.Rxd4!! cleared the d-file for the queen to infiltrate.

Interference (Blocking)

Definition

Placing a piece between two enemy pieces to interrupt their coordination; usually a sacrifice.

Famous Moment

Petrosian – Spassky, World Championship 1966, Game 10: 29.Bf8!! interfered with Black’s queen and rook, winning material.

X-ray (Indirect Attack)

Definition

A long-range piece “sees” through an intervening unit; when that unit moves or is removed, the hidden attack is revealed.

Usage

X-rays often reinforce pins, forks, or back-rank tactics.

Zwischenzug (Intermezzo)

Definition

A surprising intermediate move inserted before an expected recapture or reply, changing the evaluation of the position.

Example

Sokolov – Ivan Sokolov, Wijk aan Zee 1999: After 21...Bxd3, White’s 22.Qe8+! was a zwischenzug winning material.

Perpetual Check

Definition

A sequence of repeated checks that the opponent cannot avoid, forcing a draw.

Historical Note

Perpetual check was the saving grace for humans against computers in the early 1990s; see Kasparov – Deep Blue 1997, Game 3.

Windmill (Seesaw)

Definition

A series of alternating discovered checks and direct checks that win massive material. Usually involves a rook and bishop.

Iconic Example

Spielmann – Nimzowitsch, Munich 1905: The eternal textbook windmill with Bxh7+ and Rg8+ combinations.

Sacrifice

Definition

Voluntarily giving up material for a positional, tactical, or mating advantage.

Types

  • Permanent (sound) sacrifice – ultimately justified.
  • Speculative sacrifice – unclear but full of practical chances.
  • Sham sacrifice – wins back material quickly, often immediately.

Memorable Moment

“The Immortal Game,” Anderssen – Kieseritzky 1851, featured multiple sacrifices culminating in mate.

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Last updated 2025-06-16