I've seen dead bishops before, but I've never seen two dead rooks at once before

From an aesthetic point of view a slight shame that white resigned after g3 f3 rather than completing the construction with h4, g4

There are a few examples of the Kf1, Rg1, Rh1, f2, g2, h3 structure to be found in databases, given that even under-8 tournaments get archived these days. Mostly from white playing Rab1 in support of a possible king side attack and then having to shelter the King on f1.MartinCarpenter wrote: I've seen dead bishops before, but I've never seen two dead rooks at once before
You could take a look at old Morphy games or games in general from that period. What these demonstrate is that particularly in the opening, the nominal equivalence of material values is just a working guide and that issues of development can be far more important.John Foley wrote:I am seeking a game in which a player swaps off a queen in exchange for a rook, a minor piece and a pawn, ideally in the opening. The purpose is to illustrate the equation Q=R+N+P or Q=R+B+P. Any suggestions gratefully received.
Try Bobotsov-Tal, Varna 1958.John Foley wrote:I am seeking a game in which a player swaps off a queen in exchange for a rook, a minor piece and a pawn, ideally in the opening. The purpose is to illustrate the equation Q=R+N+P or Q=R+B+P. Any suggestions gratefully received.
Are you looking for games where the exchange leads to a balanced position, as you've said Q equals R+N/B+P, or are you looking for games where the pieces overpower the queen, as in the examples people have given so far?John Foley wrote:I am seeking a game in which a player swaps off a queen in exchange for a rook, a minor piece and a pawn, ideally in the opening. The purpose is to illustrate the equation Q=R+N+P or Q=R+B+P. Any suggestions gratefully received.