@DarthVader-wk9sd Yeah, and to me they seemed pretty well memorized. He remembered enough to get to the point where one side had a big enough advantage and was all but won
Being a titled player is impressive itself, this would be one of the fancier and straight forward ways to show it. Hitting 5 straight 3s is easy for Steph Curry, but that doesn't make it any less impressive.@@whonus3906
As someone who can not remember what he had for breakfast, the fact that Levy did not just play 3 games at the same time, but he also memorized all the moves to do this video is mind boggling.
He made the chess games and the notes that he looks at while he does videos... yes he can remember his game, but best believe, levy also preps for his videos and has notes
2:10: As of 2017 (when I left Google), there were three main engineering tracks: software, hardware, and mechanical. The distinction between them can be a bit blurry. For example, my entire job was dedicated to writing motor and flight control firmware, but I was classified as a mechanical engineer for some reason. However, the London office was (and still is?) almost entirely dedicated towards AI research, so almost everyone you were talking to probably was a SWE.
Are there any benefits or insider tips that you can offer to friends through personal references, particularly within the framework of Google's systems or hiring practices? Or is this not possible at Google?
@@blackflag4537 I don't either. I was thinking it might be a pun on German blitzkriegs during WWII, but that makes no sense as they definitely bombed London.
I realized a trick. I always find it hard to memorize any games but after he explained everything he did in a step by step basis, it's actually easier. It's never hard to remember the blunders you found or the good moves you found in a position. For example, he explained the rook and knight/bishop endgame with a pawn up as a step. There is a basic way to do it. following this, you can rethink what you thought was good and where your opponent messed up all while checking if any move looks familiar or not. Now how he remembered it long enough while playing 2 more, that's just crazy. But levy also plays blindfolded too so it makes sense.
I too realised a trick. I always find it hard to memorise the locations of any bodies I hide but after he explained everything he did in a step by step basis, its actually easier. It's never hard to remember the bodies you killed or the good moves you found against the government police. For example, he explained the best ways to wipe down a murder scene to hide evidence of the murder. There is a basic way to do it. following this, you can rethink what you thought was good and where the victim messed up all while checking if any grief the family experiences moves me or not. Now how he remembered it long enough while murdering 2 more, that's just crazy. But levy also murders grandmas too so it makes sense.
@@RaidenDisNots LMAO bro why so defensive, it was genuine appreciation of your humor, that comment is funny af lmao. They fact you reacted so negatively says soooo much about yourself damn. Chill dude, that was funny in a good way
Shoutout to gotham cheese for not only being able to win a 1 v 3 simultaneously but also being able to memorize the games and replay them in this video for us
kevy casually demonstrating how terrifyingly vast the difference between us avg players and pro level is. 3 games 15min among 100 dudes, and memorising them all afterward while playing in his head.
Levy it would be interesting to see you do a reaction to derren brown playing some chess pros in a similar format. He played an odd number of players and effectively just played their own games against each other and they couldn’t believe he could win half of the games. and then he legitimately beat the weakest opponent. It was quite funny!
15:26 In that position I feel like pawn h3 would be a really good position. Taking away the bishops square, while simultaneously creating luft for your king
Crazy how all three players, including an NM, blundered the way they did. It really does seem like players don't get stronger, their opponents just get weaker.
The level of chess here is amazing to me. Your playing 3 games at the same time on 3 different tables and being to remember all 3 games is something amazing. I cant remember the move order of the last game I played
not only man plays multiple chess games against Google engineers but also gets a cardio workout in whilst at it... waiting for Gotham on Chess-Boxing event or something