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EntertainmentHow to Play Chess

How to Use the Bishop in Chess

Transcript

Hi this is David Sullivan, today we’re going to learn how to use the bishop. Each side begins with two bishops in a game of chess. They stand on either side of the king and queen who are in the middle. You can remember that by thinking that the bishops married the king and the queen, that’s how they get the right to stand next to them.

A bishop might look kind of funny, I remember when I was a kid I use to think he always looked like he was frowning. But actually the bishop looks the way it is because he’s representing a priest that’s wearing a mitre, a type of hat.

Bishops move along the diagonals, diagonals on a chessboard are the slanty lines that are all colored in the same. You get one bishop that moves on dark diagonals, and you get one bishop that moves on white diagonals. A bishop moves in a straight line, just like a rook, as little one square or as far as the board allows. Until it either runs into the end of the board, or runs into an enemy piece. If you run into an enemy piece you land on that piece, and you’ve just finished your move.

An interesting point is, what piece do you think is stronger, a rook or a bishop? Bishops can only cover half of the squares on a chessboard, if you have a bishop that’s on a dark square, it can only move to other dark squares on the chessboard. Rooks can move to every square on the chessboard. Therefore rooks are actually more powerful, and a little more valuable in general than bishops. And that’s how we use the bishops.


Lessons in this Guide

How to Play Chess with Chess NYC

Chess Etiquette

What Is Blitz Chess?

10 Golden Moves of Chess

Basics of The Italian Game in Chess

Basics of The Ruy Lopez in Chess

Basics of the Sicilian Defense in Chess

What Is Blackburne’s Mating Maneuver in Chess?

What Is a Ladder Checkmate?

What Is a Smothered Checkmate?

What Is Légal’s Pseudo-Sacrifice in Chess?

How to Achieve Checkmate with Only the King & Rook

How to Achieve Checkmate with Only the King & Queen

How to Achieve Checkmate in 4 Chess Moves

How to Achieve Checkmate in 3 Chess Moves

How to Achieve Checkmate in 2 Chess Moves

3 Things to Consider If You Get Stuck in Chess

3 Basic Opening Strategy Principles in Chess

Basic Principles of Attacking & Defending in Chess

Capturing Pieces vs. Pursuing Checkmate in Chess

How to Understand Pawn Structure in Chess

How to Understand Chess Combinations

What Is Zugzwang in Chess?

What Is a Gambit in Chess?

What Is Pawn Promotion in Chess?

What Is Handicapping in Chess?

Legal & Illegal Moves in Chess

What Is Tempo in Chess?

What Is Space in Chess?

What Is Centering in Chess?

What Is Calculation in Chess?

How to Use Chess Notation

How to Understand Chess Symbols

How to Use the King in Chess

How to Use the Queen in Chess

How to Use the Rook in Chess

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