| Question | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| Has six different pieces. | Chess | 96%
|
| Multiple pieces can be captured on a turn. | Checkers | 90%
|
| Official American rules designate a board with 64 squares. | Both | 88%
|
| There is a move called “en passant.” | Chess | 88%
|
| Pieces are captured by jumping over them. | Checkers | 87%
|
| It is customary to say “check” when a king is threatened. | Chess | 85%
|
| Taking an opponent’s piece is mandatory if it is possible. | Checkers | 82%
|
| The term “king me” is sometimes used. | Checkers | 78%
|
| Also referred to as draughts in some places. | Checkers | 75%
|
| The top player has earned over $500,000 (USD) in yearly tournament winnings. | Chess | 74%
|
| The game ends as a stalemate (a type of draw) if a player has no legal moves. | Chess | 65%
|
| The weakest piece can be upgraded into the strongest piece. | Both | 53%
|
| White makes the opening move. | Chess | 47%
|
| Kings are allowed to move diagonally forwards or diagonally backwards. | Both | 46%
|
| Very likely originated in an Asian country. | Both | 41%
|
| The game can end as a draw if there is no progress after several dozen moves. | Both | 40%
|
| Supercomputers have solved it | Checkers | 26%
|
| Is the older game. | Checkers | 24%
|
| Some pieces can move, or jump, “double” their normal number of squares in very specific circumstances. | Both | 22%
|
| “Zugzwang” is often relevant to endgame strategy. | Both | 19%
|