Chess Position

Position: What should Black play?

f6

r1b1k1r1/ppqpnpbN/2n1p1p1/2p5/2B1P3/3P3P/PPPB1PP1/RN1Q1RK1 b q -

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h8
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a

0

games in database

52%
28%
20%

⚪ White

½ Draw

⚫ Black

Engine Evaluation

-1.13 d20
Pf6

played by

👤

Humans

0%

🧠

Maia AI

0%

Stockfish

#1

FEN

r1b1k1r1/ppqpnpbN/2n1p1p1/2p5/2B1P3/3P3P/PPPB1PP1/RN1Q1RK1 b q - 0 1
💡
Why Pf6 ?

🎯 Pf6! — The Only Good Move!

⚠️ Critical position — You found the needle in the haystack! Every other move hands the advantage back to White.

Why this is the only good move: White's Nh7 is a "poisoned" piece that creates immense pressure on your kingside. By playing Pf6, you strike at the center and prepare to trap that Knight. It forces White to find a response to the tension while you solidify your control over the g5 and e5 squares, effectively neutralizing White's aggressive setup.

❌ Why Other Moves Fail

MoveEvalWhy It Fails
Pb5+0.42Allows {{line:Bxb5 f6 Bxc6
Rh8+0.70Too slow. White plays Ng5 and escapes the trap with a solid position.
Bxb2+0.84Greedy! After Nc3, White develops with a tempo and your Bb2 is misplaced.

The traps: Many players are tempted to grab the "free" pawn with Bxb2, but this ignores the danger on the kingside. Similarly, pushing Pb5 looks active, but it allows White to simplify the position in their favor. You must address the central tension and the misplaced Nh7 immediately.

🧠 How To Find The Only Good Move

Step 1 — Recognize the critical moment: White has an offside piece at h7. If you don't act now, White will consolidate with Ng5 or Pf4, and your window of opportunity closes.

Step 2 — Eliminate the traps: Calculate the consequences of "winning" the Pb2. You'll see that White gains too much development. Realize that the Nh7 is the real target, but you can't hit it directly yet.

Step 3 — Verify the solution: The line Pf6 Qg4 Pd5 shows that by challenging the center, you force White's Queen to move and prepare the eventual capture of the Knight or a dominant central presence.

📚 Pattern: Restricting the Outlier. When an opponent's piece is deep in your territory (like the Nh7), the best strategy is often to take away its escape squares rather than attacking it head-on.

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