Learn How to Win a Chess Endgame: Rook Trap
This chess endgame shows how active rooks can turn a small material edge into a decisive attack. In classical chess, rook activity often matters more than raw pawn count, especially when the enemy king is exposed and the pawn shield is weakened. The key idea is to force the king into a restricted square, then use checks and file control to create a mating net or win material by removing the defender. Timing is critical: once the opponent’s pieces are tied down, the position can collapse quickly.