17/05/2026
Endgame — The “Moment of Truth” in Chess
✍️ Laxman Pawar
Chess Coach & Organizer
8x8 Chess Academy
📞 8421214874
“After a bad opening, there is hope for the middle game. After a bad middle game, there is hope for the endgame. But once you are in the endgame, the moment of truth has arrived.”
— Edmar Mednis
In the game of chess, there are three important stages — the Opening, the Middlegame, and the Endgame. Many players focus heavily on learning new opening variations, attractive moves, and aggressive tactics. However, the true strength of a chess player is often revealed in the endgame. That is why Grandmaster Edmar Mednis expressed such a meaningful thought in the quote above.
Even after a poor opening, a player still has hope in the middlegame. A mistake, the loss of a piece, or a weak position can still be repaired through good planning, tactical ideas, or by taking advantage of the opponent’s mistakes. Similarly, even after a difficult middlegame, there is still a chance to save the game in the endgame through accurate play.
But the endgame is a stage where accuracy, patience, and deep understanding become more important than flashy moves. Every pawn becomes valuable, every move can be decisive, and even a small mistake can completely change the result of the game. That is why the endgame is often called the “Moment of Truth.”
In the endgame, a player’s calculation ability, positional understanding, patience, and technique are truly tested. Knowing when to activate the king, how to advance pawns, how to take opposition, and how to create a passed pawn are all extremely important skills in endgame play.
Many times we see players with excellent opening preparation lose winning positions because of weak endgame understanding. On the other hand, some players calmly and patiently defend difficult positions in the endgame and even convert draws into victories. Therefore, studying the endgame is not just important — it is essential.
In today’s modern era, many students focus only on memorizing opening lines. However, great World Champions such as José Raúl Capablanca, Anatoly Karpov, and Magnus Carlsen have won countless games through their outstanding endgame skills.
In the end, one thing becomes very clear:
The Opening brings you into the game, the Middlegame gives you opportunities, but the Endgame reveals your true identity as a chess player.
Therefore, every chess player should regularly study endgames in order to make their game more complete and powerful. ♟️