That's weird, when I put it on stockfish, it instantly sees it's winning. Stockfish is very good with forced sequences, so I don't know why it wouldn't find the moves...
@@dayandere2669yeah I tried 3 versions of stockfish, 1 didn't understand till bishop sacrifice,one was like this video and the other was all brilliant moves
make sure your stockfish version is up to date and enable seeing all lines. It is important to do that because it forces stockfish to look deeper into lines instead of discarding their searches if nothing is found yet
At 3:44 it's a draw you can wait for your time to be over and it will be a draw due to king and knight not being able to checkmate.(though it's forced you can just wait for a draw)
It will only be a draw if no side can checkmate, i have a legit question, have you not played that much chess before? Because everyone has been in an endgame with just kings but one side has a queen.
Couldn't White just move the Queen to F1 Checking the KIng. The only Move for Black would be to move the Pawn one square down to G2 blacking the diagonal attack by the Queen. But then the Queen can go to 3 D- Checking the. KIng again. I think eventaully the knight can take at least one of the Pawns,if not more.
My solution(that I got) : 1. Qf1+ g2(this part is with Stockfish's help, although the rest are easy to figure out) 2. Qd3+ g3 3. Qxf5+ Rg4 4. Qh5+ Rhd 5. Qxh4# Also, apparently Stockfish thinks that taking the Queen is a mistake, instead opting for Rb1+ Edit : nvm. Bg3 loses
I worked visually on this line, as well (up to 3.Qxf5). It seems reasonable and I would have played something similar on board. Thanks for mentioning it.
Wow, that's amazing! Thanks ! I watch your videos and solve puzzles on lichess, they help me understand and find good moves like in this puzzle, and now thanks to this I managed to solve this puzzle and I'm so happy about it!
OK a very nice solution the double sacrifice; but it assumes that black uses the rook to check and take the queen; he could just move the pawn up take the queen. but why not queen to kb1; check, pawn must move forward to block, queen to q3 check; pawn likely moved forward to block; queen takes pawn check. Rook must block; Queen to KR check Rook must block; queen takes rook checkmate; now there is a problem the bishop could have blocked. In your solution; the Black could have just used the pawn pushed up and the queen is lost.
not true. life is not black and white. Same with your chess skills. Sometimes you just didnt have the pattern already in place in your brain. Next time you see a position remotely similar, you ll find 1 brillint, then 2, then the whole variation. Just keep wkg on the game and let things happen 👊🏻
I actually got it right im only about 1100 elo but i can see very hard sacrifices at least for my level but i still blunder a lot in games but im proud of this 😁
My stockfish finds a forced mate in 15 and the best moves are completely different. I am sorry to say but this puzzle i guess is not mathematically correct but still fascinating is your method to checkmate.
That's not checkmate, black can block with the bishop. Never forget, when it's a check, there is 2 potential other options, other than moving your king: blocking with a piece or taking the piece that puts the king in check