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any chess fans here? Check out this 7 year olds end game


Pete

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1 hour ago, Pete said:

cut to the 7:00 minute mark to get a lesson on how to finish a chess game

Watched the whole thing; that was fun.

 

Watch when the kid takes the guy's queen.  He grabs the queen, removes it from the board,  and uses it to tap the clock reset button all in 1 move.  LOL.

 

Kid has style.

 

 

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The guy playing white would have won if he didn't mess up at the 8:21 mark.

 

Instead of moving the pawn to A4, he should have moved the king to D3. At worst, white can force a draw, if not win it. You even see him hesitate and move his hand back and forth; unsure on which piece to move. He chose poorly.

 

The kid's best move was standing up and provoking white into playing speed chess, which forced him to make a mistake.

Edited by unbillievable
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ON a related note....

I was in a game with only 3 pieces left: two kings, and a queen.  I was the one with lone king.

Most people fold automatically. I wanted to play it out. The guy didn't know how to checkmate with only two pieces. Declared a draw after 50 moves with no pieces taken.

 

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Probably a dumb question: What is the purpose of the timer?

 

I am a Backgammon man. I havent played chess in years, though I may see if dad would like to play. Between the drink and smoke, that will take a while. Certainly slower than that seven year old!

 

 

 

 

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39 minutes ago, BUFFALOKIE said:

Probably a dumb question: What is the purpose of the timer?

 

I am a Backgammon man. I havent played chess in years, though I may see if dad would like to play. Between the drink and smoke, that will take a while. Certainly slower than that seven year old!

 

 

 

 

https://play.chessbase.com

the timer makes it possible for me- 1750 to beat a 2600 in 5 minutes.  It's all about time pressure.  Less time to calculate.  That 2600 player would beat me in 20 moves if he had all day to calculate.  But the timer makes it more of a level playing field, especially with a time crunch.  I myself like to play 5 minutes or 3 minutes with 2 seconds a move- for example if you take 5 seconds to move- 3 seconds come of the clock.  But a 1 second move adds 1 second

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4 hours ago, \GoBillsInDallas/ said:

dbd52942b599b2e94e70af0a83c71d23.jpg

 

Tea, girls, warm, sweet
Some are set up in the Somerset Maugham suite

Get thai'd, you're talking to a tourist
Whose every move's among the purest
I get my kicks above the waistline, sunshine...

 

...

And thank God I'm only watching the game controlling it

I don't see you guys rating
The kind of mate I'm contemplating
I'd let you watch, I would invite you
But the queens we use would not excite you

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2 minutes ago, Pete said:

https://play.chessbase.com

the timer makes it possible for me- 1750 to beat a 2600 in 5 minutes.  It's all about time pressure.  Less time to calculate.  That 2600 player would beat me in 20 moves if he had all day to calculate.  But the timer makes it more of a level playing field, especially with a time crunch.  I myself like to play 5 minutes or 3 minutes with 2 seconds a move- for example if you take 5 seconds to move- 3 seconds come of the clock.  But a 1 second move adds 1 second

So, break it down. Is there a play clock or an overall game clock, or what? Both players had relatively long pauses.

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5 minutes ago, BUFFALOKIE said:

So, break it down. Is there a play clock or an overall game clock, or what? Both players had relatively long pauses.

I have a chess clock.  You make your move, then hit the clock.  Then time is deducted from opponents clock, until he moves, then he hits clock and time starts counting down off your clock, until you move and hit clock.  5 minutes time seems to me to be most common setting for the clock.  But it can be 10, 20, 30, 60 minutes.  But Blitz chess is usually 5 minutes or less. In other words, the game is over after checkmate, or someone's clock expires.  Blitz chess is quite fun

Edited by Pete
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18 minutes ago, Pete said:

You win by either check mating, or your opponent's clock runs out of time

 

or he resigns, sometimes by hurling his king into the rushing river beside your game that afternoon

 

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12 minutes ago, Pete said:

https://play.chessbase.com

the timer makes it possible for me- 1750 to beat a 2600 in 5 minutes.  It's all about time pressure.  Less time to calculate.  That 2600 player would beat me in 20 moves if he had all day to calculate.  But the timer makes it more of a level playing field, especially with a time crunch.  I myself like to play 5 minutes or 3 minutes with 2 seconds a move- for example if you take 5 seconds to move- 3 seconds come of the clock.  But a 1 second move adds 1 second

Do they use opening books in blitz chess?

 

 

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3 minutes ago, ExiledInIllinois said:

Do they use opening books in blitz chess?

 

 

opening books?  A good blitz player is familiar with most opening lines.  That's why some in Blitz chess try to play uber aggressive, non conventional openings that someone might not be familar with such as Danish Gambit(one of my favorites) or The Grob(statistically the worst opening move, but has great lines, and will confuse many opponent, especially during blitz game)

 

Edited by Pete
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1 minute ago, Pete said:

opening books?  A good blitz player is familiar with most opening lines.  That's why some in Blitz chess try to play uber aggressive, non conventional openings that someone might not be familar with such as Danish Gambit(one of my favorites) or The Grob(statistically the worst opening move, but has great lines, and will confuse many opponent, especially during blitz game)

 

Right up my ally! LoL

 

 

2 minutes ago, row_33 said:

 

any decent player has everything cold for most common openings

 

 

That almost sounds Cheatriot-esque. LoL

 

But I get what you mean.

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1 hour ago, ExiledInIllinois said:

That almost sounds Cheatriot-esque. LoL

 

But I get what you mean.

 

the current world champion is not a grind on opening theory or much of any theory at all, quite a feat in the day of computers helping for "analytics"

 

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5 minutes ago, Chef Jim said:

Kid looked bored.  Playing with it fingernails the whole time.   I've not played in a very long time and I thought I was good.  No...I sucked. 

  Yep.  I remember back in school there was a chess "club" that played during an afternoon study hall.  My ego took a trimming in that I seldom got out of the middle rounds to be a final 4 contestant.  Didn't like it at the time but it was good for me in terms of building character in that a person will not be excellent at everything he tries and that if he wishes to continue then work on improving.

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49 minutes ago, Ridgewaycynic2013 said:

When Murray Head mentions ‘massage parlours’, it saddened me to think even this thread circles back around to Kraft...

?

 

never cared about the Kraft story, it couldn't possibly bring anything truly positive to my mind or soul

 

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19 hours ago, row_33 said:

 

the current world champion is not a grind on opening theory or much of any theory at all, quite a feat in the day of computers helping for "analytics"

 

I downloaded Magnus' free chess app. recently. You can simulate playing him at different ages. 

I hadn't played in years and I have only used it a few times. His 14 old self beat me pretty easily about 5 times in a row so I started lower and beat him when he was 8☺ I have won one game so far against 10 yr old Magnus out of 7.  Feels good to play chess again and exercise my brain in that way.

Edited by Turk71
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16 minutes ago, Turk71 said:

I downloaded Magnus' free chess app. recently. You can simulate playing him at different ages. 

I hadn't played in years and I have only used it a few times. His 14 old self beat me pretty easily about 5 times in a row so I started lower and beat him when he was 8☺ I have won one game so far against 10 yr old Magnus out of 7.  Feels good to play chess again and exercise my brain in that way.

 

well done!

 

i used to play a lot more, had a few colleagues a bit better than me which made it a good challenge

 

 

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1 minute ago, row_33 said:

 

well done!

 

i used to play a lot more, had a few colleagues a bit better than me which made it a good challenge

 

 

I started young and played a lot at different periods of my life but haven't really had anyone to play against in the last 20 years or so. I learned from my older brother and 'Bobby Fischer Teaches Chess'. We had a few other master chess books laying around. This is the first chess app I have had and it is really challenging, my brain started to hurt the first time I played from not playing for so long. 

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21 minutes ago, Turk71 said:

I started young and played a lot at different periods of my life but haven't really had anyone to play against in the last 20 years or so. I learned from my older brother and 'Bobby Fischer Teaches Chess'. We had a few other master chess books laying around. This is the first chess app I have had and it is really challenging, my brain started to hurt the first time I played from not playing for so long. 

 

i was just old enough to joint the Bobby craze, when it was cool to play the game

 

great to see you have found something challenging, not a surprise coming from Magnus

 

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There is no single board game that can overtake chess... and there never will be. It is the ultimate board game. 

 

I have a chess table that I built in the 90's... (don't know how to put pics on here) but I spent weeks making it. Shame I haven't used it in 20 years. 

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20 minutes ago, T&C said:

There is no single board game that can overtake chess... and there never will be. It is the ultimate board game. 

 

I have a chess table that I built in the 90's... (don't know how to put pics on here) but I spent weeks making it. Shame I haven't used it in 20 years. 

   My Grandpa used to make nice chess boards and cool cribbage boards that looked like ships in his basement wood shop. I have one of each.

   I have always loved chess and can't believe I went so many years without playing. Glad I got the Play Magnus chess app. Feels good to be playing again.

   

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1 hour ago, Turk71 said:

   My Grandpa used to make nice chess boards and cool cribbage boards that looked like ships in his basement wood shop. I have one of each.

   I have always loved chess and can't believe I went so many years without playing. Glad I got the Play Magnus chess app. Feels good to be playing again.

   

 

alright, i'll look into that app... :D

 

 

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On 4/24/2019 at 6:37 PM, BUFFALOKIE said:

So, break it down. Is there a play clock or an overall game clock, or what? Both players had relatively long pauses.

Think of it as a game clock.  

 

When I finish my move I hit the button, and that starts YOUR clock running.  When you finish your move you hit the button and start my clock running.  My clock picks up where it left off and continues to keep track of cumulative time.  It doesn't reset.

 

In this way, the first of us to hit a pre-determined cumulative time limit loses, assuming no one has lost on the board already.

 

 

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On 4/24/2019 at 6:37 PM, BUFFALOKIE said:

So, break it down. Is there a play clock or an overall game clock, or what? Both players had relatively long pauses.

 

each side has a set time to...

 

1) finish the game in a relatively short amount of time, 5 minutes is common, 1 minute is a good challenge for the best in the game; or

 

2) finish a number of moves, say 40 moves in 100 minutes, with the next 20 moves timing agreed to in advance, used for the more formal competitions.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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