"cheaters will be reported and will be ban" - siwento number 1: he got a 64.8 accuracy! number 2: 1 brilliant move doesn't define that someone is cheating number 3: ur opponent's grammar is horrible number 4: hallsyy18 made one blunder, cheaters won't number 5: check the time usage number 6: if all aren't suspicious cheating areas, then forget about it, or what i like to do, report my opponent for false accusations
@@eggermanned lmao it was at like midnight for me atleast so I was em very tired and playing very sloppy could be the same for him to regardless looked like 2 1000s
I'm 1600 and can believe it. Most of the mistakes look like simple bad day moves at my rating range. The only thing is that they are definitelly more numerous than in basically any game I can remember at this level, so I guess it was a REALLY bad day for both players (or really unlucky).
naaah man that kinda feedback is how we got a bunch of creators yelling at me with "HEYEYYYYEAAYY WHATSUPITZYABOISQUEAKSTREAMER9000 AND ITS TIME TO BLOW UP THIS WHOLE BUNCH OF TNT IN MINECWAFT" in the first 5 seconds of any video. Just find a good middle ground Halsy.
When the game review says you both played like 100's. I mean that definitely argues that it's a very bad game since you're both rated about 800. But yeah your mom was right about preventing a fork by going d5 on move 4. White was threatening knight to f7 forking the rook and queen, and king cannot take due to bishop protection. You should hate f6 because if that queen goes to g5, it's forking a pawn and a knight. Whichever one white protects, black takes the other. On turn 12 d3 was not the move for white as you say because knight takes d3 is a free pawn. Only thing that can take the knight back is a queen, then white is giving up a full queen and a pawn for a knight and white loses on the spot. Long castle is not a hard move to find. We're 13 turns in and your king is in the center of the row. Get it out of there!! Also you get the rook instantly backing up the queen in a down the middle attack. You also don't sacrifice the bishop because after a queen trade, the rook that's meant to long castle takes a free rook with check and also wins a free bishop. You're literally trading a bishop for a rook and a bishop. There was a lot of badly timed development. I bet anything she has a bad case of finding the right move one turn too late, and still making the move, even though it's no longer even good. This is not the worst game ever played. If you want it to be a true argument for worst game ever, it needs to be a stalemate. I recently saw a game where black stalemated white, and white had 7 pieces left!! Both players were rated about 1900.
Use ur time wisely if it’s in a critical situation u need to calculate that being said tho don’t spend to much time on a move u don’t have to as u will just lose on time also always check for checks captures and attacks
You're still quite young! You will most likely get to 2500 if you keep playing actively. I've gotten to 2000 (1900 FIDE) in only about 17 months of playing chess, at 15 years old.
As an advanced-expert chess player, let me put a straight. White somehow create weaknesses by playing g3 but the bishop wasn't nearby king as guardian piece. So with Rxe3(!!) hopeful white recapture with the f pawn then Bxg3(!!) is devastating sacrifice. If I play as white, I would resign because the king soon be so exposed and vulnerable
0:41 That's exactly what I do and what everyone should do 1:08 My chess coach says to think, but then my friend thinks for 3 minutes for an obvious recapture, so it is important to think, but only in the right scenarios, like a wild position or if you have a complex tactic or maybe a boring position. THIS PART IS VERY IMPORTANT! One question that narrows the thinking process a lot is: "How can I move to my opponent's half of the board and attack something?" If not, then ask yourself for checks, captures, attacks for you AND YOUR OPPONENT!!! If none, then try to improve your own pieces and find a way to get ready to move to your opponent's half of the board. If it is a blitz game, play more intuitively, but if it is a standard time control, ask yourself these questions every move during the middlegame phase. 1:19 I play 3. f5 here instead of 3. a6 to be more aggressive 2:19 this is a good moment to use your time 2:55 isn't there just 11. h3? maybe you are planning to go h5 and attack along the h-file 3:24 Nh6 is ok, but I don't like it because it is a backward knight move, so if you want to be extra aggressive and confuse your opponent even more, go 11. h5 giving the h-file a chance to work 3:40 these are the consequences of not calculating far enough and playing more defensively with Nh6 instead of h5 8:42 White just goes Qf3+ and your chances are gone after Qxf7# 9:38 I prefer Bg5 here developing the bishop to the most advanced square, supported by h4 for greek gift ideas, and if they ever go h6, you can either take the knight, move back, or what I prefer to do which is h4, the most aggressive move. 9:44 no need to retreat bishop, instead go Bg5, keep on moving forward. 12:10 isn't there just Qxd5 trading queens? Re1 is nice as well though. 14:15 instead of b3 going for c4, you should go f4 going for f5, after Rxe5 you go Qf6 and you win. 16:45 people who only analyze their wins... Yes, this is analyzed by a 2000 elo player.
@@hallsyyyyy1876 I'm one yeaar younger than u, I also got into chess in late feb and I'm 600 but progress can be faster, I increase 20 elo(play win 3/4 games)everyday how to improve?
@@godzillafirefox923 one thing I did is change a setting where I can’t play anyone lower then me really so I can more elo for wins and loss less for losses
@@hallsyyyyy1876 yes, I have -25 and +infinite but my problem I face is that after the opening I can't defend middlegame attacks which are mostly of queen and I either hang mate and lose or lose bcoz of time. My opening accuracy is usually around 85 and I do vienna and king indian.