Being in check means it’s your move and the pieces are positioned so that if it was your opponent’s move they could capture your king. So, to “remain in check” would mean to make a move which still allows your opponent to capture your king. If this were allowed the opponent would just capture your king and you would lose. Instead, the rules of chess require you to “get out of check”, i.e. make a move which prevents your opponent from capturing your king. If there is no such move you are said to be in “checkmate” and you lose.
It's a good question as most games, including chess have few rules about making otherwise legal moves illegal just because they might be suboptimal. In novice games the other player might not even realize they can win, so it being illegal to stay in check is an oddity but one that's actually in the rules.
As far as I’m aware, the only game-theory difference between chess and a variant of chess
where moving into check is legal, is that stalemate exists. Otherwise the “can’t move into check” rule is basically useless.
It's funny-- except for Tenoke all the responses so far boil down to essentially this.
I'll try again.
Assume an alternate reality where this incredibly important rule doesn't exist. In it, the other player simply takes the king on the next turn from a neophyte who didn't realize they are still in check.
What bad things would happen as a result of the non-existence of the gratuitous rule?
And don't just speculate based on the zero cost of posting on HN. Give me the real reason based on the history of the creation of chess rules and/or the documented behavior of real chess players in history.
> Assume an alternate reality where this incredibly important rule doesn't exist. In it, the other player simply takes the king on the next turn from a neophyte who didn't realize they are still in check.
This is not merely an alternate reality; this is effectively the reality of blitz chess, where capturing the king is a way of claiming victory by declaring that the opponent made an illegal move when they didn't move out of check. In blitz chess you do not have the right to correct illegal moves after the opponent points them out.
If the penalty for the specific illegal move of not getting oneself out of check is to lose the game, what could the practical significance of the rule possibly be?
The other respondent is claiming that chess would become a game of "gotcha," as if the rule somehow prevents chess players from faking injuries to distract the chess ref and get free moves.
In regular chess, the rule just helps a player avoid one particular kind of blunder. Basically, it was arbitrarily decided that game records should never have king captures in them.
I would agree that makes it a poor excuse for a rule.
Chess is a politically-themed wargame featuring monarchy. The King, being top kick, makes the rules of the land. Of course the King would enact such a rule that makes putting/leaving him in danger illegal.
Think about actual, medieval monarchs in their castles, holding literal absolute power over everyone. If someone were to invent a board game featuring a King, and the King were to be made aware that you moved him into danger and got him captured, he might have your head.
I feel as if I'm asking something fundamental that hasn't been considered by insiders. As if I asked music afficionados why Beethoven's Appassionata Sonata couldn't be performed in F-sharp minor and the response is something like, "Because arbitrarily changing the keys of sonatas would make a travesty of classical music, and performing the piece in F minor supports the preferences of the people who enjoy listening to classical music."
I don't know the history, but it's consistent with all the other rules, e.g. checkmate stops the game one move before the king is captured, stalemate occurs if the king would have to open himself up to capture, etc.