yes. it can even deliver the check in a mate. An absolute pinned piece can never deliver checkmate because it can be captured.
Which peace could be checkmated in chess?
If the king is in check and the checked player has no legal move to get out of check, the king is checkmated and the player loses. Under the standard rules of chess, a player may not make any move that places or leaves their king in check.
Which piece could checkmated in chess?
There are four fundamental checkmates when one side has only their king and the other side has only the minimum material needed to force checkmate, i.e. (1) one queen, (2) one rook, (3) two bishops on opposite-colored squares, or (4) a bishop and a knight. The king must help in accomplishing all of these checkmates.
Can a king be attacked by a pinned piece?
No piece can be moved that will either expose the king of the same colour to check or leave that king in check. It is possible not only for a pinned piece to block a king’s motions, but also for a pinned piece to actively give check or even checkmate.
Can a pinned piece block a king’s motion?
It is possible not only for a pinned piece to block a king’s motions, but also for a pinned piece to actively give check or even checkmate. For example: 1. Be1 Bxc3+ 2. Qb2+ Nb3++ White’s bishop blocks the check, pinning itself. Black’s bishop pins itself when taking the knight, but simultaneously checks White.
Can a chess piece be pinned to its king?
So far, so good. Now, consider the special case of a piece which is ‘Pinned’ to his own King. The pinned piece can not move such that it exposes his King to check. Now, this is where the logic breaks down, because the rules (FIDE 3.1) state that even though a piece may be pinned, it still exerts it’s attacking influence.
What happens if a king is pinned to a square?
Let’s consider the impact if the rule was changed so that a King could move into a square ‘attacked’ by a King-Pinned piece. The King would occupy the square with impunity, because his opponent must respect the rule of not moving into check.