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Zwischenzug (Intermezzo)

Zwischenzug, or "in-between move," is a tactical surprise where a player interrupts an expected sequence of captures with a powerful intermediate move, such as a check or a threat. This unexpected twist can completely change the outcome of a trade. Learn to look beyond the obvious to find these hidden resources.

⚡ In-Between insight: The most missed moves are "in-between" moves. They interrupt your plan and shock you. Sharpen your calculation to spot these hidden tactical resources.
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The Art of the "In-Between" Move

A Zwischenzug interrupts a predictable sequence with a surprise threat, often completely changing the outcome.

💡 The Golden Rule: When your opponent captures a piece, do not recapture automatically! Look for a check or a threat first.

Zwischenzug (German for "Intermediate Move") occurs when you delay an expected move—usually a recapture—to play a more forcing move first. This "in-between" move often changes the result of the game from a draw to a win, or a loss to a save.

1. The Modern Masterclass

The Setup

Black (Ponomariov) just played ...Qxg5, capturing White's Queen.

99% of players would instantly play hxg5 to recapture. But Vishy Anand saw something deeper.

The Zwischenzug

34. Rf7+!

Anand inserts an Intermediate Check. Black must respond to the check. This forces the Black King to a worse square. Only after the King moves does Anand recapture the Queen, winning a crushing endgame.

Anand vs. Ponomariov, 2005

2. Historical Masterpieces

The concept isn't new. The greatest legends of chess history—Morphy, Capablanca, and the romantics—used the Zwischenzug to devastating effect.

The "Counter-Attack" (Morphy)

White just played Bxe4.
Most players would recapture with ...dxe4. Morphy played the stunning 10... Qh4!

Instead of taking the Bishop, he threatens Mate on f2! If White defends the mate, Morphy can recapture the Bishop later—or simply crush White's King.
Lichtenhein vs. Morphy, 1857

The "Trap" (Capablanca)

White just played Bxb8.
White thought he won a piece because if Black recaptures (...Rxb8), White has a fork.

But Capablanca played the Zwischenzug 9... Nd5!, ignoring the Bishop and threatening a fork of his own on e3. White's trap backfired completely.
Tartakower vs. Capablanca, 1924

The "Zwischenschach"

White just captured on b4.
Instead of recapturing immediately (...Qxb4), Black inserts the deadly check 16... Rc1+!.

White must move the King, losing the right to castle and getting his King stuck in the center before Black finally recaptures the piece.
Rosenthal vs. De Vere, 1867

Why Learn Zwischenzug?


Frequently Asked Questions

What exactly is Zwischenzug?

Zwischenzug (German for "intermediate move") is a tactic where, instead of playing the expected move (usually a recapture), a player first makes a forcing move (like a check or mate threat) that the opponent must answer.

What is a Zwischenschach?

It is a specific type of Zwischenzug where the intermediate move is a check. This is often the most powerful type because the opponent has no choice but to respond to the check immediately.

Who invented the term?

The concept is as old as chess, but the term was popularized in chess literature by Fred Reinfeld and Irving Chernev in 1933.


📖 Essential Chess Glossary
This page is part of the Essential Chess Glossary — A quick-reference dictionary of chess terms, jargon, and definitions — filter by category and understand commentary from beginner to advanced.