@@kotarotennouji5238 I mean I’m pretty sure he understands that and it was a joke, not a serious question. I mean it was literally explained in the video
Yes but it can be very tricky you need a good endgame technique but this kind of endgame is quite rare and for a human we are more likely to blunder the rook faster
It is harder to force Phillidor's position than it is to win from it. One thing I find useful is that the win is relatively easy from the position where all four pieces are on a single diagonal and it is the defending player to move e.g. defending K on b8, R on c7, attacking K on d6 and Q on e5. So break the technique down to getting to this diagonal position, the Phillidor's, then mate.
If you reach the diagonal position with the attacking player to move, just retreat the Queen one square along the diagonal, and use the mate threats to force the diagonal set up with the defending player to move instead.
Multiple ways to win. Qh8+ Rh7 Qg8 Rf7+ (last ditch stalemate trap every other move results in mate in a couple) Kxf7 and not Qxf7 as that is stalemate, Kh5 Qg3 Kh6 Qh4# or Qg6# or the simpler Qf8 Kh5 Qxg7 Kh4 Qg2 Kh5 Qg3 Kh6 and again Qh4# or Qg6# Both are mate in five.
Kh6 will only speed up the process of getting checkmated because moving queen to f8 forces the king to move(rook pinned via that move so either you lose the rook or get checkmated immediately)
@@rachnaverma610 You just play 5. Qg8 and its mate in two. Edit: actually, black has 5... Rf7+ which will delay mate but as long as white takes with the king rather than the queen (that would be stalemate) it will be mate shortly.
Move queen to f8 and king is forced to move away to h5 or if king goes to h7 then its checkmate in 1(rook pinned to the king by the queen so it cant move at all)