So yeah basically this except you know what you've done wrong lolI'm annoyed at myself for inadvertently engineering a stalemate while playing with my regular chess partner the other day, even though I was threashing him. Second time that's happened. I need to be more careful when it gets to that stage in the game.
A checkmate occurs when one player's king is in check and there's no legal move they can make (i.e. no way to get out of check), as I'm sure you know.I've been playing it a lot today hungover against a bot
I keep getting the bot down to their king but I am too stupid to understand the concept of checkmate and so keep ending up in stalemate
I need someone (they need only be very mildly clever) to explain to me
I felt "dog being shown a card trick" levels of incomprehension today as I stalemated the AI again and againA checkmate occurs when one player's king is in check and there's no legal move they can make (i.e. no way to get out of check), as I'm sure you know.
But if a player can make no legal move while their king is not in check, it's a stalemate, regardless of the other player's level of advantage. So if your opponent has hardly any pieces left - e.g. just a king and a couple of pawns that can't move because they're got your pieces in front of them - you need to think very carefully about how you move, so as to avoid preventing the king from moving without putting it in check. So don't instinctively rush to make what seems to be the most aggressive move, as this can mean throwing the game away.
Looking forward to thistried it once, spent a few days doing nothing but playing online and watching youtube videos on openings, but had to put an end to it because it invaded my brain to a degree where my dreams became these abstract inescapable feedback loops of distress
You start to realise the capabilities of the pieces and feeling terror when you see that queen coming for you
And the bastard knights, and the bastard bishops
What a discovery so late in life and all because I got drunk before getting a haircut
Already spending circa 3 hours a day playing balatro now I've got chess.com on the go
Where will I find time for Proust and my fleshlight?
] Carlsen showed an aptitude for intellectual challenges at a young age. At two years, he could solve 50-piece jigsaw puzzles; at four, he enjoyed assembling Lego sets with instructions intended for children aged 10–14.[13]
His father, a keen amateur chess player,[14] taught him to play at the age of five, although he initially showed little interest in it.[15] Magnus has three sisters; he has said his original motivation to study chess seriously was a desire to be able to beat his elder sister.[16]
Carlsen developed his early chess skills by playing by himself. Carlsen had an exceptional memory and could recall the locations, populations, flags and capitals of all the countries in the world by the age of five.[17] He participated in his first tournament—the youngest division of the 1999 Norwegian Chess Championship—at 8 years and 7 months, and scored 6/11.[18]