Chess Position

Position: What should White play?

Qxd7+

q6r/p1Nnk2p/8/B1b1ppp1/Q7/P3P3/1r3PPP/R2R2K1 w - -

8
7
6
5
4
3
2
a1
b
c
d
e
f
g
h

0

games in database

52%
28%
20%

βšͺ White

Β½ Draw

⚫ Black

β™Ÿ

Engine Evaluation

M5 d20
QQxd7+

played by

πŸ‘€

Humans

0%

🧠

Maia AI

0%

β™Ÿ

Stockfish

#1

FEN

q6r/p1Nnk2p/8/B1b1ppp1/Q7/P3P3/1r3PPP/R2R2K1 w - - 0 1
πŸ’‘
Why Qc6 ?

❌ Qc6?? β€” Blunder

EVAL: [β–‘β–‘β–‘β–‘β–‘β–‘β–‘β–‘β–‘β–‘] -5.37

M5 β†’ -5.37 (Loss: -105.32)

πŸ’‘ Problem with Qc6: White ignores a forced checkmate to trade Queens. By moving to c6, the Qa4 allows Black to simplify the position with Qxc6, neutralizing White's massive kingside pressure.

βš–οΈ Comparison

CoupEvalRuleVerdict
βœ… Qxd7+!M5βœ“ King SafetyForced Mate in 5
❌ Qc6??-5.37βœ— Tactical BlindnessThrows away a win

⚑ Opponent's Punishment

After Qc6:

  1. β†’ Qxc6 removes the most dangerous attacker.
  2. β†’ White loses: The initiative and the game, as Black's extra material and active Rb2 now dominate.

πŸ“š Lesson: When you have a forced mate or a crushing tactical sequence like Qxd7+, do not settle for a losing endgame trade.

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Chess Position - What to Play? Best Move Qxd7+ | WhyThisMove