Learn How to Force Mate in 2: Rook Endgame
This chess endgame shows how active rooks can turn a seemingly balanced position into a forced mating net. Even with material equal, king placement and piece coordination matter more than pawn count. The key idea is to use the rook to create a direct check that restricts the enemy king’s escape squares, then finish with a second rook move that seals the mating box. In classical chess, these patterns often appear when one king is exposed and the rooks are perfectly aligned.