Tactics vs. Strategy
Chess players often talk about two different kinds of thinking: strategy (long-term planning — where to put your pieces, what pawn structure to aim for) and tactics (short-term sequences that win material or achieve something concrete within a few moves).
Tactics are what make chess dramatic. A position can look perfectly balanced, then one side spots a fork or a pin and suddenly the game is over. The good news: tactical patterns repeat themselves. Learn to recognize them, and you'll start seeing them everywhere.
The Fork — Attack Two Pieces at Once
A fork is when one piece attacks two (or more) enemy pieces simultaneously. Your opponent can only move one piece per turn, so they're guaranteed to lose something.
Knights are the natural fork artists because of their unique L-shaped movement, but any piece can fork. Pawn forks are especially dangerous because a one-point piece threatens two high-value pieces — easy to overlook until it's too late.
How to spot fork opportunities
- Look for enemy pieces lined up on the same rank, file, or color square
- Work backwards from where you want the piece to land, then ask: "Can I get there in one move?"
- Always check if a knight move attacks two pieces before playing anything else
The Pin — Nailing a Piece in Place
A pin occurs when attacking a piece that can't move because a more valuable piece sits behind it on the same line. Moving the pinned piece would expose the piece behind it.
There are two kinds:
- Absolute pin: The piece behind is the king. Legally, you cannot expose your king to check — so the pinned piece is completely frozen.
- Relative pin: The piece behind is valuable (often the queen). The pinned piece can technically move, but doing so drops a more important piece.
How to use a pin
- A pinned piece is a sitting duck — pile pressure on it with other pieces
- Maintain the pin while making threats elsewhere to force difficult decisions
- Watch for your opponent trying to "unpin" by interposing a piece or pushing a pawn to break the line
The Skewer — The Reverse Pin
A skewer is essentially a pin in reverse. Instead of attacking a less-valuable piece with a more-valuable piece hiding behind it, you attack the high-value piece directly. It has to move, and the piece behind it gets captured.
Skewers most often happen with check — when your rook or bishop attacks the king, the king must move, and whatever was behind it is lost.
The Discovered Attack — The Hidden Threat Revealed
A discovered attack happens when moving one piece opens up an attack from a different piece behind it. The moved piece can make its own threat while simultaneously uncovering an attack from the piece in the rear — your opponent faces two threats with only one move to respond.
The most powerful version is the discovered check: the rear piece puts the king in check. Since the king must be dealt with immediately, whatever the moved piece grabbed is essentially free.
Building Your Tactical Eye
Knowing the names is the easy part. Spotting these patterns mid-game under time pressure is the skill. These habits help:
Ask "why?" after every opponent move
Before thinking about your reply, ask: "What is my opponent threatening?" A move that looks random often sets up a fork or pin one move later. Get in the habit of looking for threats before looking for opportunities.
Generate candidate moves, then choose
Instead of playing the first move that looks okay, force yourself to list two or three candidates. Ask: "Is there a fork here? A pin? A discovered attack?" Comparing options — even briefly — trains pattern recognition over time.
Solve tactical puzzles every day
The single most effective way to improve at tactics is daily puzzle practice. Short positions with a forced solution train your eye to recognize patterns instantly — the same way a musician learns scales. Even ten minutes a day compounds quickly.
Put your tactical eye to the test
Game Dojo's AI flags every fork, pin, and blunder as you play. Every game is a tactics lesson.
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