Better to give the (mate in 3):
No — I’ll give the people mean:
White: Kb6, pawns a7, c7 Black: Ka8, pawns a6, b7 shredder chess puzzle
White: Kg6, pawns f7, g7, h7 Black: Kh8, pawns f6, g5 Better to give the (mate in 3): No
Here’s a useful write-up on the — a classic and clever problem that illustrates underpromotion and the "shredding" of defensive resources. What Is the Shredder Chess Puzzle? The "Shredder" puzzle (named after the chess engine Shredder , which popularized it, though the composition is older) is a mate-in-N problem where White has a seemingly overwhelming material advantage but must promote a pawn carefully — not to a queen, but to a knight or rook — to avoid stalemate or a perpetual check. The key theme is underpromotion to shred the opponent’s fortress . The key theme is underpromotion to shred the
Black: Ka8, pawn b7