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  2. Chess Piece Values. As mentioned, each piece has a different value. It should come as no surprise that the piece values are directly tied to a piece's strength. A pawn is worth one point, a knight or bishop is worth three points, a rook is worth five points and a queen is worth nine points.

  3. www.chess.com › article › viewChess Pieces Values

    Feb 4, 2009 · knight = 3½; bishop = 3¾ ; rook = 5; queen = 10 (Evans 1967). A bishop is usually slightly more powerful than a knight, but not always – it depends on the position (Evans 1967). A chess-playing program was given the value of 3 for the knight and 3.4 for the bishop, but that difference was acknowledged to not be real (Mayer 1997).

  4. with queens on the board, knight is worth four pawns (as commented by Vladimir Kramnik for a full board); the bishop pair is an advantage (as one can hide from one bishop by fixing king and pawns on the opposite colour, but not from both), and a greater one in the endgame;

  5. According to this point system, a pawn is considered the weakest piece in chess with only 1 point. After that comes the knight and bishop with 3 points. The next piece is a rook with 5 points. It is considered the second most powerful piece in chess. The queen is worth 9 points, the highest.

  6. The queen and rook are called major pieces and the bishop and knight minor pieces. So a knight is worth three pawns. If you exchange a knight for three pawns the material situation remains level. In practice it also depends on the position. In the endgame the three pawns become more valuable.

  7. Knights and Bishops are worth three points each, making them equal in value. However, one does become more valuable than the other as the game progresses.

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