Double check


In chess and other related games, a double check is a check delivered by two pieces simultaneously. In chess notation, it is almost always represented the same way as a single check, but is sometimes symbolized by "++". This article uses the latter convention for clarity.

Chess

The most common form of double check involves one piece moving to deliver check and revealing a discovered check at the same time from a piece it had been blocking. The only possible replies to a double check are king moves, as both checking pieces cannot be captured or blocked at once. In some cases, the king can capture one checking piece and escape the other in a single move.
In exceptional circumstances, it is possible for the moved piece to not participate in the double check. The only way for this to happen in orthodox chess is by way of an en passant capture. In the position shown, Black has just played 1...g7–g5. White replies 2.hxg6++. The result is a double check even though the pawn White moved does not give check. Such a double check is extremely rare in practical play, but is sometimes found in problems.

Game examples

wrote, "Even the laziest king flees wildly in the face of a double check." Because the only possible response to a double check is a king move, the double check is often an important tactical motif. A famous example is Réti–Tartakower, Vienna 1910, which arose after 1.e4 c6 2.d4 d5 3.Nc3 dxe4 4.Nxe4 Nf6 5.Qd3 e5 6.dxe5 Qa5+ 7.Bd2 Qxe5 8.0-0-0 Nxe4 9.Qd8+ Kxd8 10.Bg5++ and White mates after 10...Ke8 11.Rd8# or 10...Kc7 11.Bd8#.


A double check was also seen in the celebrated Evergreen Game, Anderssen–Dufresne, 1852. Anderssen won with 20.Rxe7+! Nxe7 21.Qxd7+!! Kxd7 22.Bf5++ Ke8 23.Bd7+ Kf8 24.Bxe7#.

Variants

In chess with variant rules or fairy pieces, other ways of delivering a double check may be possible. Triple, quadruple and even quintuple checks may also be possible. For example, in the position shown, after Black plays 1...d5, White plays 2.exd6e.p.+++++. After the en passant capture, five pieces check the black king: both moas, the rook, the grasshopper and the bishop.

Xiangqi

In xiangqi, the Chinese version of chess, triple check and even quadruple check is possible even without using fairy pieces, as in the following examples:

Triple check: Red moved his horse from e5 to d7, giving check and exposing a double check from the chariot and cannon.

Quadruple check: Red moved his chariot from f9 to e9, uncovering two checks from the horses, giving a check of its own, and making a platform for the cannon at e7 to give yet another check. In janggi, using the same pieces and adding two elephants which both attack the general through the chariot's square allows a sextuple check.