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Chess Board Viewer - Online Setup FEN & Analyze Positions

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Position Analysis
Side to move-
Castling rights-
En passant target-
Halfmove clock-
Fullmove number-
White pieces-
Black pieces-
White material-
Black material-
Material balance-
Place Piece
White:
Black:
Click a piece or the eraser, then click the board
Preset Positions
๐Ÿ Start Position ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡น Italian Game ๐Ÿ”ท Sicilian Najdorf โ™Ÿ QGA Accepted โšก Rook Checkmate ๐Ÿซ™ Empty Board
Frequently Asked Questions
What is FEN in chess?

FEN (Forsyth-Edwards Notation) is a standard notation for describing a chess position. A single FEN string encodes the entire board layout, whose turn it is, castling rights, en passant targets, and move counters. It's widely used by chess engines, databases, and online platforms to save and share positions.

How to read a FEN string?

A FEN string has 6 space-separated fields: Piece placement (8 ranks separated by slashes, lowercase=black, uppercase=white, digits=empty squares); Active color (w/b); Castling rights (KQkq or -); En passant target square (e.g., e3 or -); Halfmove clock; Fullmove number.

What does "w KQkq - 0 1" mean in FEN?

w = White to move. KQkq = Both sides have full castling rights (White: Kingside & Queenside, Black: Kingside & Queenside). - = No en passant target. 0 = Halfmove clock (for 50-move rule). 1 = Fullmove number (increments after Black's move).

How does en passant work in FEN?

If a pawn has just moved two squares forward, the en passant target square is recorded in the FEN (e.g., "e3" means a pawn on e2 moved to e4, and the opponent can capture en passant on e3). If no en passant is possible, the field contains a dash "-".

What do castling rights mean?

K = White can castle kingside, Q = White can castle queenside, k = Black can castle kingside, q = Black can castle queenside. A dash "-" means no castling is possible. Rights are lost when the king or rook moves.

How can I use this chess board viewer?

You can click pieces to select and move them around the board, use the piece palette to place new pieces, delete pieces with the eraser tool, load positions via FEN strings, flip the board perspective, and analyze material balance. It's perfect for studying positions, setting up puzzles, or sharing board states with others.