A Chess Introduction for Novices

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Chess is one of the greatest traditional board games you will ever play. The beauty of chess is the almost endless level of skill and strategy that you can employ as you climb the ranks and face increasingly skilled adversaries.

Irrespective of your age or skill level, you can find opponents to play and challenges to face. It truly is a game for all ages.

Of course, as a newcomer, you'll find it hard to play chess with other players, especially as you're starting to absorb the elementary moves. What you can do is practice on an electronic opponent until you learn the basic moves. There are numerous online services or computer-based games that you can try to increase your skill level.

Personally, I very much prefer a three-dimensional layout, so I usually play on a chess game computer when I want to play by myself. There are many competent electronic chessboards that can increase in difficulty level as you improve, which is an advantage that they hold; and they also work as an objective measure of your skill level at the game. Quite a few boards will even calculate a ranking for you based on your rate of play and how skilled your moves are.

As you begin to play against these computerized competitors, your goal is to learn the board, learn the assorted moves of each chess piece, and learn the basic defense and attack strategies.

Once you've conquered the basic movements of the pieces, and you can build move sequences without saying to yourself "okay, one square up and two squares to the left," you're ready to move on to a real player.

So find yourself a cheap chess board games, get another novice, and start playing one of the world's oldest and best games.

The endless possibilites in game play make chess a great game choice for the whole family.

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DGT 2010 Digital Chess Clock

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DGT 2010 Digital Chess ClockAfter 14 years we say goodbye to DGT 2000 and welcome the DGT 2010. With 200,000 clocks sold, the DGT 2000 (official clock of the world chess federation FIDE) was the most successful digital chess clock in the last decade. The DGT 2010 replaces the DGT 2000Numerous improvements have been implemented!Specifications:Larger displays with more info in displayMuch easier to programBuzzer functionCanadian and Japanese byo-yomiOnly 2 batteries (now included in delivery)New lever mechanismThe DGT 2010 is in full accordance with the World Chess Federation (FIDE) laws of Chess. MANUAL: For Details, Download the DGT 2010 Manual (PDF)

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Chronos GX TOUCH Chess Clock - WhiteThis newest clock in the lineup from Chronos, the maker of some of the most prestigious chess timers in America, is sure to be a favorite of fine chess clock users everywhere. The Chronos GX Digital Chess Clock Touch Switch is a new blitz version--just like the Chronos Digital Chess Clock with 2 LCD screens-yet smaller in size. This version has the "touch" sensor so that you don't push the button down; it just senses the slightest brush of your finger!Features:4 preset blitz times8 preset tournament controlsmove countera new GO! time settingfully customizableany delay or increment time2 LCD screensSeveral preset time controls and full customizationChronos Manual for answers to all your questionsSpecifications:Batteries included6.5" x 2.5" x 2.5"

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Classy Chess Boards

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Chess has a long history, extending back more than 1600 years and yet it is the most popular game in the world. Chess is a very old game that engages two simulated "armies." Each game is a fierce combat fought by foot soldiers, knights, kings, and queens. Although Chess does not deal with numbers and equations, it is like math in many ways. Playing chess has always involved problem-solving skills, which are imperative when working out math equations that have many steps. However, unlike math, the ultimate aim in a Chess game is to checkmate the opponent by capturing the opposing King. Sounds easy enough, right? Not necessarily true. The strategies and advance planning are the keys to winning games.

The most primeval and perhaps most enduring feature of Chess are certainly the Chess boards, the "battleground" upon which it is played, the field of Chess struggle. They consist of sixty-four parts, each part a small square, in their totality comprising a large square. In eight rows and perpendicularly thereto, in 8 lines the sixty-four squares are arranged. Accordingly, one can draw Chess Boards by halving the side of a large square three times in succession. The industrial process of manufacturing Chess Boards is therefore very simple, and the logical conception, neither is apprehension of the boards intricate. It is interesting to note that the chess boards can be simple or elaborate in contruction. High school kids still learn to make chess boards in their wood shop classes. The boards are made from many different materials. From cardboard to wood and even marble, there is a wide variety of boardsw to choose from.

The acuity of the sixty-four squares by the eye is not so easy, but it has been eased by the use of color. The Chess Boards are made up of sixty-four squares arrayed in an 8×8 grid of alternately colored black and white squares. It is of importance that the learner of Chess should know the board very accurately. The apprentice should be able to visualize each square in its individual position, as well as in its relation to its neighboring squares. Consequently, Chess Boards have been divided into three regions – the middle and the two wings. Each player starts of with sixteen pieces, set up in two rows. There are six different types of pieces and each moves in a different way. One player has white pieces and other has black ones. The player with the white pieces makes the first move.


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