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Chess 101: The Bishop Chess Piece

June 20, 2011
Tags: Chess 101, Learning Chess Articles, Teaching Chess Articles

Bishop Chess Piece

The Bishop chess piece is easily the most forgotten piece of all the chess pieces. From the beginners’ perspective, the piece cannot do a whole lot to help out your game, considering each piece can only cover half of the board at a time and is quite vulnerable to attacks from straight on. But the bishop does have his place in the game of chess. In most chess sets, the piece is very traditional. It is a tall, slender piece with a pointed tip that has a strange cut made into it. Usually, the design doesn’t change much, unlike the Knight piece, which has a lot of flair in it’s design.

How A Bishop Chess Piece Moves

The bishop chess piece is stuck moving in diagonals. Each player starts out with two bishop pieces, each one residing on it’s own color of square. Between both pieces, you can cover the entire board, but one piece can only cover one half of the board, only the colors of squares it started the game on.

  • The bishop can move in any direction diagonally, so long as it is not obstructed by another piece.
  • The bishop piece cannot move past any piece that is obstructing it’s path.
  • The bishop can take any other piece on the board that is within it’s bounds of movement.

Basic Tactics

Bishops are usually considered stronger pieces toward the end of the game. Often, though, the pawns make it difficult to use the bishop piece during the early parts of the game. The bishop is considered excellent in defending a castled King, though and can be used to help pin pieces into areas of the board. Most experts would agree, though, that giving up a Bishop is better than giving up a Rook.

Favorite Chess Sets

Here are a few of our favorite chess sets with good bishop pieces:

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