Beginner

11. Stalemate & Draw

Learn when a chess game ends in a draw and the tricky stalemate rule.

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Introduction

Not every chess game has a winner. Sometimes the game ends in a draw. The most surprising way is stalemate—when a player has no legal moves but isn't in check!

Lesson Content

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Stalemate: it's Black's turn but the king has no legal moves—every square around it is either occupied or attacked. But the king is NOT in check. Result: the game is a draw!

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Stalemate is a common accident when one side is winning. Here White has a queen and king vs. a lone king. White must be careful not to stalemate Black!

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It's Black's turn. The king has no legal moves but is not in check. What is the result?

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Other types of draws: (1) Agreement—both players agree to a draw. (2) Threefold repetition—the same position occurs three times. (3) 50-move rule—50 moves with no captures or pawn moves. (4) Insufficient material—neither side can checkmate.

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King vs. King with no other pieces. What is the result?

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What's the key difference between stalemate and checkmate?

Key Takeaways

  • Stalemate: no legal moves + not in check = draw
  • Stalemate is different from checkmate (draw vs. loss)
  • It's a common mistake when one side has an overwhelming advantage
  • Other draws: agreement, threefold repetition, 50-move rule, insufficient material
  • King vs. King is always a draw

Summary

Draws happen through stalemate, agreement, repetition, the 50-move rule, or insufficient material. Watch out for stalemate when you're winning!

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