Start from the finished game
Open the completed Chess.com game you want to preserve and confirm the opponent, date, time control, and result. If you are making a gift, this is the moment to avoid copying the wrong archive entry.
The exact Chess.com interface can change, so treat the goal as more important than the button label: you need either the public game link or the full PGN move record.
Look for share, export, download, or PGN options
In the game view or analysis area, look for a share, export, download, or PGN option. If Chess.com exposes a PGN text box, copy the full text. If it offers a .pgn download, save the file.
A public game URL may also be useful when supported, but PGN is the safer fallback because it does not depend on a public page staying readable forever.
Check the PGN before using it
A useful PGN should include a real move list, not only a diagram or a single board position. It should be the complete game and include enough player/result context for you to recognize it.
If comments, engine lines, or annotations are included, the move list still needs to be valid. Endgame needs the chess score, not copied analysis notes from another site.
Bring the game into Endgame
Open the creator, paste the PGN, upload the .pgn file, or try a supported game URL. Then choose the structure that fits the memory: The Position, The Trace, The Score, or The Sequence.
Preview the design before checkout. If the game is private, deleted, or hard to import by URL, use the PGN you exported while you still have access to the game.