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You forgot of an important detail at 0:29 If you take their pawn, you must move your king afterwards to avoid immediate stalemate since all of black pawns will be stuck instantly after, white is still winning since its a free promotion and the other pawn will be blocked
If black made a knight instead: Queen to D2 instead. King can’t move, forcing the knight to move either to C2 (where next move is checkmate) or B3 (where next move is still checkmate)
I guess you mean queen f8 takes queen g8... king takes queen g8 and you still have a bishop and rook... you got a piece more than white... you are gonna win
so everyone looks here in this position on why he sacrifice the knight. Because this is a tactic called Clearance. Clearance involves sacrificing a piece to let the other piece jump in for a finishing combo. Checkmate
2 rooks are not better than a queen, actually, it depends on the layout of the board, the queen has much more mobility and equals 9 points of material, while rook only move in lines and need to be constantly protecting eachother, 1 rook equals 5 points of material, 2 equal 10 points of material, however it greatly depends on the pieces' positions