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Laws of Chess: For Competitions Starting Before 1 July 2014

The document summarizes the key rules and objectives of chess: - The FIDE Laws of Chess cover official over-the-board play and were adopted in 2008. Local federations can introduce additional rules as long as they do not conflict with the FIDE laws. - The objective is to checkmate the opponent's king by placing it under attack without any legal moves. A game is drawn if neither player can checkmate. Member federations can introduce supplementary rules for local play.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
75 views3 pages

Laws of Chess: For Competitions Starting Before 1 July 2014

The document summarizes the key rules and objectives of chess: - The FIDE Laws of Chess cover official over-the-board play and were adopted in 2008. Local federations can introduce additional rules as long as they do not conflict with the FIDE laws. - The objective is to checkmate the opponent's king by placing it under attack without any legal moves. A game is drawn if neither player can checkmate. Member federations can introduce supplementary rules for local play.

Uploaded by

Koki Mostafa
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Laws of Chess: For competitions starting before

1 July 2014

FIDE Laws of Chess cover over-the-board play.


The English text is the authentic version of the Laws of Chess, which was adopted at the 79th FIDE
Congress at Dresden (Germany), November 2008, coming into force on 1 July 2009.
In these Laws the words he, him and his include she and her.

Preface
The Laws of Chess cannot cover all possible situations that may arise during a game, nor can they
regulate all administrative questions. Where cases are not precisely regulated by an Article of the Laws, it
should be possible to reach a correct decision by studying analogous situations which are discussed in the
Laws. The Laws assume that arbiters have the necessary competence, sound judgement and absolute
objectivity. Too detailed a rule might deprive the arbiter of his freedom of judgement and thus prevent
him from finding the solution to a problem dictated by fairness, logic and special factors.
FIDE appeals to all chess players and federations to accept this view.
A member federation is free to introduce more detailed rules provided they:
a. do not conflict in any way with the official FIDE Laws of Chess, and
b. are limited to the territory of the federation concerned, and
c. are not valid for any FIDE match, championship or qualifying event, or for a FIDE title or rating
tournament.

BASIC RULES OF PLAY


Article 1: The nature and objectives of the game of chess
1.1
The game of chess is played between two opponents who move their pieces alternately on a
square board called a chessboard. The player with the white pieces commences the game. A
player is said to have the move, when his opponents move has been made. (See Article 6.7)
1.2
The objective of each player is to place the opponents king under attack in such a way that the
opponent has no legal move. The player who achieves this goal is said to have checkmated the
opponents king and to have won the game. Leaving ones own king under attack, exposing
ones own king to attack and also capturing the opponents king are not allowed. The opponent
whose king has been checkmated has lost the game.
1.3
If the position is such that neither player can possibly checkmate, the game is drawn.

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