Learn How to Win Material: Endgame Interference
This chess endgame puzzle shows how a quiet-looking rook move can create a decisive tactical sequence. The key idea is interference: one piece steps onto a critical square to disrupt the opponent’s coordination, especially when the enemy queen is tied to defense and the king is exposed to tactical pressure. In classical chess, these motifs often decide the game by winning material rather than by direct attack. The position also highlights how pinned pieces and loose defenders can turn a small initiative into a large advantage.