Learn How to Spot Blind Swine Mate: Mate in 2
This chess endgame puzzle is a classic blind swine mate pattern: one rook invades the first rank, then the second rook delivers the final checkmate from the side. The key idea is coordination between rooks on open files, where the defending king is boxed in by its own pieces and nearby squares are controlled. In classical chess, these mating nets often appear when active rooks dominate an exposed king and the opponent has no useful luft or blocking resource.