Excalibur electronic 915-W Games User Manual


 
6.1 Capturing
To win at chess, you’ve got to
know how to take your oppo-
nent’s men! Capturing men
while
playing your King Arthur is
really the same process as mov-
ing, except, of course, the cap-
tured piece has to be removed.
To capture one of King Arthur’s
pieces, simply lift your piece off
its
FROM square, pressing the
square to properly register the
move. Then lift the piece being
captured off the
TO square, and
set your piece down on the
TO
square, pressing the square. Set
the captured piece aside, off the
board.
When King Arthur displays
his move and there is one of
your pieces on his
TO square, he
knows he’s capturing that piece.
Follow the normal procedure:
Lift his piece off the
FROM
square, pressing the square. Lift
your piece from King Arthur’s
TO square, and then set King
Arthur’s piece down on its
TO
square, pressing the square. Set
the captured piece off the board.
6.2 Castling
Castling is a special and
important move in chess. It
whisks the king away to safety
while getting the rook into the
game. Castling while playing
King Arthur is just like moving
any other piece, except that in
castling, you move two pieces,
and you have to move the king
first.
Whether you’re castling king-
side or queenside, first move
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happens, you can push the
THREAT key, and King Arthur
will flash the threatening move.
Draw
Messages
5.5 Draw
When King Arthur recognizes
that a three-fold repetition of the
position has occurred, he will
display “
DRAW.” Additionally,
when King Arthur recognizes
that 50 moves have been played
without exchanges or pawn
moves, he will display
DRAW.” In either case, you
can accept the draw or ignore it
by continuing to play.
5.6 Stalemate
When either opponent has
been stalemated, “
STALE” will
be displayed. (Stalemate occurs
when one of the players has no
legal moves but is not in check.
Stalemate is one of the ways a
game can be drawn.)
Game-ending
Messages
5.7 Forced checkmates
King Arthur will announce
when he can force a mate-in-two
(“
MAtE2”) or a mate-in-three
(“
MAtE3”). He will display
MatE,” along with “+” when
executing a checkmate.
5.8 Other checkmates
When you checkmate King
Arthur, he will display “
LOSE.”
When you want to claim a win,
draw, or want to resign—press
the
NEW GAME key.
It’s useful to focus on four
chess moves—capturing, cast-
ling, promoting pawns, and
en
passant
—to make sure you
understand how to operate your
King Arthur when employing
these moves. If you need a fuller
explanation of the chess moves
themselves, please see the US
Chess Federation’s “Let’s Play
Chess” brochure enclosed with
your King Arthur.
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ENGLISH
KING ARTHUR
CHAPTER 6:
SOME SPECIAL
CHESS MOVES