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In Chess , a fork is a Tactic that uses one piece to attack two or more of the opponent's pieces at the same time, hoping to achieve material gain (by capturing one of the opponent's pieces) because the opponent can only counter one of the two (or more) threats. The piece moving to make the multiple attack on the opponent's pieces is the ''forking'' piece. The opponent's pieces which are attacked by the forking piece are ones which are ''forked''. The type of fork is commonly named after the type of forking piece. For example, in a knight fork, a knight moves to attack two or more opponent's pieces in the same move. Any type of chess piece, including a King , may be able to become a forking piece. Any types of pieces can be forked, although a king cannot fork a piece that will attack it, because a king cannot move into check. The forking move itself may or may not be a move which captures an opponent's piece. Knight s are often used for forks: they jump to a position from where they attack two pieces and cannot be counterattacked except by other knights. is oriented with Black's first row at the top, so the black pawn is moving downward.) A Queen move also often attacks two pieces at the same time, but this typically gains material only if both pieces are undefended, or if one is undefended and the other is the opposing king. Since the queen is usually more valuable than the pieces it is attacking, it usually only gains material capturing undefended pieces. However, the possibility of a queen fork is a very real threat when the queen is out in the open, as is often the case in an Endgame . A fork by a protected queen of the opposing queen and king (or an undefended piece) can be useful if the forking player wants to force an exchange of queens. The term ''royal fork'' is sometimes used to describe the situation where the king and queen are forked, and thus being the worst fork possible; such a scenario would result in the loss of a player's queen in almost all situations. When three or more pieces are attacked by a knight at the same time, the situation is sometimes referred to as a "cluster fork". The following example of a fork is from the first round of the FIDE World Chess Championship 2004 between Mohamed Tissir and Alexey Dreev . After White's 33rd move the following position was reached:
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