19 JUN 2025

Selfmate in 2

by K. A. K. Larsen

Fränkische Heimat (Fata Morgana Turnier) 1927, 1st Prize

If White could simply skip their turn, Black would be compelled to play ...exd2#, fulfilling the stipulation. It seems, then, that all White needs is a waiting key, one that preserves the status quo and passes the move to Black — but as it happens, no such option exists.

 

One might try 1.Ba1; after 1...b2, White replies with 2.Bxb2, leaving Black no choice but 2...exd2#. The flaw, however, is that 1.Ba1? opens a flight square for the wK — and 1...exd2+! promptly throws a spanner in the works.

 

What else is there? Unpinning the bBg5 or bRc3 is clearly off the table. Moving either wN concedes escape to the bK, so that's out of the question too. And if the d3-bishop drifts to some random square — say, 1.Bh7 — it grants the wQ access to d2, turning 1...exd2+ into nothing more than a harmless check.

 

But just when all hope seems lost, the improbable 1.Bxc2! shimmers into focus, a subtle stroke that finally breaks the impasse. If 1...bxc2, then 2.Qf8! follows, leaving 2...exd2# as the only legal move. If 1...exd2+ instead, then 2.Kd1! is the quiet reply, and once again, Black has no recourse but 2...bxc2#.

 

A classic Fata Morgana with a splendidly well-hidden solution!