

A stalemate is a win for the player delivering the stalemate. A check to kings is considered checkmate if at least one of them is unable to escape from this check. To win, it is enough to checkmate one King. A player wins the game when he/she checkmates his/her opponent's king (s). This means that if your Queen is under attack, then you will not be able to deflect it from the blow, since the King will appear in the place where the Queen is. The appearance of the King on the square where it is threatened with check is unacceptable.

With each move, the fields of the board fill up, turning a chess battle into an unprecedented opposition of chess pieces. So one piece generates another, and only the king does not generate any pieces during its movement. On the square where the knight stood, after its movement, the bishop appears, and so on until the king appears. Thus, after the pawn's move, a knight appears on the square where this pawn stood.

After a piece leaves the square on which it stood, a new chess piece appears on this square, according to the following chain of cycles: Pawn - Knight - Bishop - Rook - Queen - King. The movement of pieces and their 'reproduction'. Chess pieces move across the board as they do in ordinary chess - according to the standard rules of move and capture.
