How To Swap Your King And Rook In Chess
To do this move your king not one but two spaces towards the rook you are castling with. The king and the rook move towards each other and swap places.
This is easy just castle as white.
How to swap your king and rook in chess. In the same move youll pick up the rook on that side and move it to the space the king moved through to get to its new position. Making the king and rook change place in chess is referred to as castling make the king and rook change place in chess with help from a chess expert in this free video clip. Move the rook to the other side of the king.
Castling may only be done if the king has never moved the rook involved has never moved the squares between the king and the rook involved are unoccupied the king is not in check and the king does not cross over or end on a square attacked by an enemy piece. Castling puts the king out of the center of the board where generally speaking it is in more danger than on the side of the board. It can work well as a defensive strategy but also can free up a rook.
The king cannot castle right into a check. The king cannot castle over a square that is controlled by your opponents pieces. Castling consists of moving the king two squares towards a rook on the players first rank then moving the rook to the square over which the king crossed.
On a kingside castle the rook will replace the position of the bishop on that side. This is the only situation in which you would move two of your own chess pieces in the same move. White moves see above.
The pieces should be next to one another. Castling is the only move in chess where two pieces the king and rook move at the same time. Castling is a combination move of both pieces.
On line the rook will move automatically. Move the king two square towards the rook and put the rook on the other side of the king next square. The king should be moved first or both pieces simultaneously since a rook move could stand alone and an opponent might make you stop your move at that point as being legal not letting you complete castling.
Then place the rook on the opposite side of the king shown in the diagram to the right. There are no pieces between king and rook the white king has never moved before and the king is not in check now and must not cross a square that is protected by blacks pieces.