
Zen Chess: Mate in Four
300 Grandmaster-curated mate-in-four puzzles in a stripped-back package that will genuinely sharpen your tactical calculation, but only if you already know how the pieces move.
Compare Prices(0 stores)
Loading prices...
We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.
Screenshots & Media

About Zen Chess: Mate in Four
My first thought sitting down with Zen Chess: Mate in Four was that four-move forced checkmates are where casual chess ends and real pattern recognition begins. This is not a game where you click around experimentally and stumble onto the answer. Each of the 300 puzzles requires you to hold a full decision tree in your head, four half-moves deep per side, and find the only line that closes out the king. The puzzles were curated by a Grandmaster ranked in the top 200 in the world, and that pedigree shows in the selection. You are not grinding through amateur compositions; these are clean, instructive positions with clear themes, ranging from back-rank pressure to piece sacrifice setups that force the defender down a single corridor. The game loop is as tight as the puzzle count implies. You load a position, work out the line, place your piece, and the game plays the opponent's forced responses automatically, advancing your next move prompt. One wrong move and the position resets immediately, no undo, no hints. That instant-reset mechanic is a double-edged sword. On one side it keeps you disciplined and prevents you from stumbling through by trial and error, which is genuinely valuable training. On the other side, if you have almost the right idea but misidentify the move order, you get no feedback about how close you were. A beginner working through this without external resources, a tactics book or a chess engine in a second window, will hit a wall fast. And that brings me to the single most important thing to say about this entry in the series: the lack of any move-legality guidance is a real obstacle. The game lets you attempt illegal moves and simply resets without explaining why the move was invalid. Earlier entries in the Zen Chess line share this same design gap, and Mate in Four, sitting at the hardest end of the numbered series, feels it most acutely. If you already understand piece movement, castling rules, and the concept of discovered check, that absence costs you nothing. If you do not, you should play Zen Chess: Mate in One first and work up the ladder. The presentation does deliver on the zen label. The board is clean, the piece designs are sharp and uncluttered, and the original soundtrack is composed specifically to sustain focus during longer think sessions. There is nothing here to distract you from the calculation work. That is a genuine design choice, not an oversight, and players who use tactics trainers regularly will recognize the philosophy: reduce visual noise so the position speaks for itself. The Steam rating sits at roughly 76 percent positive across a small review pool, which tracks with the game finding its audience among dedicated chess fans rather than the broader casual crowd the series markets itself toward. For strategy players who already have a club-level understanding of chess, this is a compact, well-sourced puzzle set that fits neatly into a commute or a focused half-hour session. The 300-puzzle count is modest, the session lengths are short, and there is no procedural generation, so once you have solved every position the replay value is essentially zero unless you are returning to drill speed. Treat it as a tactics workbook with a soundtrack, not a game with progression systems, and your expectations will land in exactly the right place. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows XP/Vista/7/8
- Memory
- 2 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 9.0c
- Storage
- 100 MB available space
- Graphics
- Graphics card supporting DirectX 9.0c
- Processor
- 2 Ghz Dual Core
- Sound Card
- Any
Community Discussion
Be the first to comment on Zen Chess: Mate in Four.
Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- Minimol Games
- Publisher
- Minimol Games
- Release Date
- Apr 30, 2019







