Moving Chess Pawns Online
Pawns are very significant in chess. They do 3 functions on the board: block, support, and convert. To do these things online we need to know the proper ways of moving chess pawns online.
When moving pawns on the online chess board we need to point the arrow on the piece we want to move, click on it once, and then put it on the square we want it on by dragging it there. Once we have placed it on the square desired, we click on it again to make it stick there. If we don't, the pawn piece will be dragged wherever we bring the arrow on the screen. The only way to make it stick to the square we want it on is to click on it again once we have placed it there.
If we have clicked on a pawn and then suddenly change mind to move another pawn instead of the first one, we simply place back the pawn to its original place and make it stay there by clicking on it. In some games, this change of mind will cost us a point deduction. The best thing to avoid such deductions is to think first and make sure we have a good move plan before we click on a pawn, or any other piece for that matter.
Moving chess pawns online means we do it one square per turn, and only in a forward motion. However, if the pawn is moved from its original starting formation, it can be moved two squares forward. For instance, it's our turn to move a piece. If we decide to move a pawn that has already been moved, we should move it one square forward. Pawns are never moved backwards in chess. If we move a pawn from a beginning formation we may opt to move it 1 or 2 squares forward.
Pawns are also moved diagonally online, but only when capturing an enemy piece. When using chess notation, for instance, if we have a pawn on a4 and an enemy piece is on b5 we may capture that piece with an a4-b5 move. Pawns can capture any enemy piece, even a queen, provided that the piece to be captured is on the next square diagonally and it's our turn to move. Never dare check any piece with a pawn unless it is supported.
Moving chess pawns online is exactly like how we move them on traditional chess boards. The only difference is that, online, we simply click on them and drag.