Pick a classic position and play it out against the engine. The drill tracks whether you reach the objective.
Use the queen a knight’s-move away to herd the king to the edge, then bring your king up and deliver mate. Watch for stalemate.
Build a box with the rook to shrink the enemy king’s space, take the opposition with your king, then cut off the last rank for mate.
King leads the pawn. Seize the opposition and advance the king first — only push the pawn once your king has cleared the way to promote.
The classic rook-and-pawn win. Make room with a rook check, shelter your king, then "build a bridge" with the rook to block the checks and queen the pawn.
Hold the draw a pawn down: keep the rook on the third rank to deny the enemy king entry, then drop behind to check from the rear once the pawn advances.
Use checks to force the defending king in front of its own pawn, gaining a tempo each time to march your king closer. With a knight-pawn this is winning.
A pawn down with opposite-coloured bishops is a fortress draw. Blockade the passed pawn on a square your bishop controls and keep your king nearby.