en passant????

The pawn "vanishes" mysteriously into the air, not knowing how it got attacked since the capturing pawn did not land on that square.
The pawn "vanishes" mysteriously into the air, not knowing how it got attacked since the capturing pawn did not land on that square.
This is known as the paradox of “Pawn Lag”

En passant (French for 'in passing') is a special chess rule that gives pawns the option to capture a pawn which has just passed it. Here's an example:
Black has just moved his pawn forward two spaces, and landed alongside the white pawn. What many beginners to chess don't realize is that white has the option to capture the black pawn as if it had only moved one square instead of two.
White doesn't have to capture in this scenario, but if he doesn't, the option won't be there next turn.
Imagine it as if the black pawn is moving past white's pawn. In the moment while it is moving past, white has the chance to attack it, but only in that moment. Once the pawn has successfully moved past (the turn is over), it can't be attacked by en passant anymore.
En passant (French for 'in passing') is a special chess rule that gives pawns the option to capture a pawn which has just passed it. Here's an example:
Black has just moved his pawn forward two spaces, and landed alongside the white pawn. What many beginners to chess don't realize is that white has the option to capture the black pawn as if it had only moved one square instead of two.
White doesn't have to capture in this scenario, but if he doesn't, the option won't be there next turn.
Imagine it as if the black pawn is moving past white's pawn. In the moment while it is moving past, white has the chance to attack it, but only in that moment. Once the pawn has successfully moved past (the turn is over), it can't be attacked by en passant anymore.
Wrong. En passant is forced. If you don’t take it, it results in a brick to the pipi.
(sarcasm)

The en passant is a chess move in which the pawn diagonally captures the opponent's pawn after advancing 2 spaces. This move was created to make sure pawns cannot escape enemy pawns by advancing 2 spaces. Let's see en passant in action:
3.dxc6 is the en passant move.