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Sacrifice (chess)

In chess, a sacrifice is a move that gives up a piece with the objective of gaining tactical or positional compensation in other forms. A sacrifice could also be a deliberate exchange of a chess piece of higher value for an opponent's piece of lower value.

For other uses, see Sacrifice (disambiguation).

Any chess piece except the king may be sacrificed. Because players usually try to hold on to their own pieces, offering a sacrifice can come as an unpleasant surprise to one's opponent, putting them off balance and causing them to waste precious time trying to calculate whether the sacrifice is sound or not, and whether to accept it. Sacrificing one's queen (the most valuable piece), or a string of pieces, adds to the surprise, and such games can be awarded brilliancy prizes.[2]

Types of sacrifice[edit]

Real versus sham[edit]

Rudolf Spielmann proposed a division between sham and real sacrifices:

Chess tactics

Desperado

Exchange sacrifice

Queen sacrifice

Immortal Game

The Game of the Century

– a game that shows the sacrifice of a rook for a tempo

§ Planinc vs. Minić, 1973

. The Art of Defense in Chess. McKay Chess Library, 1975. ISBN 0-679-14108-1.

Andrew Soltis

. The Modern Chess Sacrifice. Tartan Books, 1978. ISBN 0-679-14103-0.

Leonid Shamkovich

. Positional Chess Handbook. B. T. Batsford Ltd., 1991. ISBN 0-7134-6395-3.

Israel Gelfer