Setting up your chessboard
Setting up your chessboard is the first step in playing a game of chess. Take your time setting up the board until you’re confident that you know where everything goes:
Set the rooks (the pieces that typically look like tiny castle towers) on the corner squares.
Place the knights (typically horse-like pieces) next to the rooks.
Put the bishops (pieces that are typically topped with a teardrop shape) on the board next to the knights.
After the bishops come the queens, usually recognizable by a small crown near the top of the piece. The queens always start on the square of the same shade — the white queen starts on a light square, and the black queen starts on a dark square.
Place the kings next to the queens, which is only fitting. These pieces typically have a tiny cross at their top.
Add the pawns (the smallest and shortest pieces) straight across the rank in front of the other pieces.
Setting up your chessboard is the first step in playing a game of chess. Take your time setting up the board until you’re confident that you know where everything goes:
Set the rooks (the pieces that typically look like tiny castle towers) on the corner squares.
Place the knights (typically horse-like pieces) next to the rooks.
Put the bishops (pieces that are typically topped with a teardrop shape) on the board next to the knights.
After the bishops come the queens, usually recognizable by a small crown near the top of the piece. The queens always start on the square of the same shade — the white queen starts on a light square, and the black queen starts on a dark square.
Place the kings next to the queens, which is only fitting. These pieces typically have a tiny cross at their top.
Add the pawns (the smallest and shortest pieces) straight across the rank in front of the other pieces.