no
Yes
In checkers, a king can capture multiple pieces in a single turn by jumping over them, but it can only do so if there are consecutive jumps available. Once a king captures an opponent's piece, it can continue to jump and capture additional pieces if they are positioned correctly. However, a king cannot eat "double" in the sense of capturing two pieces in a single jump; each jump must involve a separate piece. The only limit is that a player must make all possible captures during their turn.
No, the rules of checkers do not allow a king to double jump on the same move. A double jump refers to making the jump twice in one move. The rules call for one movement per turn.
can a single jump over a double in checkers/draughts
Possible outcomes with one cube = 6 Possible outcomes with 2 cubes = (6 x 6) = 36 Probability of a double-one (snake eyes) = 1/36 = 2.78% (rounded) Odds: 35 to 1 against
You can
Yes
In checkers, a king can capture multiple pieces in a single turn by jumping over them, but it can only do so if there are consecutive jumps available. Once a king captures an opponent's piece, it can continue to jump and capture additional pieces if they are positioned correctly. However, a king cannot eat "double" in the sense of capturing two pieces in a single jump; each jump must involve a separate piece. The only limit is that a player must make all possible captures during their turn.
yes
No, the rules of checkers do not allow a king to double jump on the same move. A double jump refers to making the jump twice in one move. The rules call for one movement per turn.
can a single jump over a double in checkers/draughts
You are jumping rope with two ropes.
No, the kings just allow you to go backwards (which in my opinion is very fun).
Spyro doesn't really double jump, but he can hover/ glide after jumping into the air.
No, it is not possible to double jump in the game.
The double-headed dragon.
The 'flying king' rule is part of the international ruleset for draughts, but does not exist in the English Draughts ruleset, which is also known and played as American Checkers. So it depends which country you are in, and which rules variant you use.