Learn How to Win a Chess Endgame: Knight Fork
This chess endgame shows how a knight can dominate when the board is stripped down and king activity matters most. In classical chess, a well-placed knight often creates threats that are hard to meet because it jumps over pawns and attacks multiple targets at once. Here, the key idea is to use a quiet move to improve the knight’s coordination and force a favorable simplification. The position rewards accuracy, not speed, and the side with the more active king and passed pawn usually controls the outcome.