Watching anything at its highest level is always interesting. I'm not a fan of chess myself but it's still so fascinating and impressive to see what people are capable of!
That's right, I don't want to analyze the loser's page by analyzing this link. It seems normal to me to show the chess from one side without flipping it.
Look at the situation. Magnus is beating Bill Gates, and no real evidence has surfaced under FBI/CIA care, from the highly surveillance recorded Epstein island. Bill is ecstatic.
Probably not. Prodigies often don't make good teachers, because they are so gifted that they often can't even comprehend the difficulties average people have.
Being a good player and being a good teacher are different skills. If you are also a grandmaster then learning from Magnus would be great but if you are a beginner or intermediate player then you would probably be better off being taught by someone who is an experienced teacher/coach.
recently got really into chess. I had watched this clip way before but at that time, I thought vidit was just a random, decently good at chess, Indian kid
First game appeared to have increment (2 seconds), so the total time spent would have been 1:11 + (increment x moves), which would probably have been around 2 minutes. Also FIDE is pronounced 'feeday'. Awesome videos! Keep 'em up! (and it would be cool to have just a little bit more analysis in the games)
Yeah that bugged me, too. But as to the relative lack of analysis I really don't mind because not only does it keep the video moving at a feverish pace the announcer also makes it sound like an MMA match!
Magnus is like the Mike Tyson of chess. His opponents are coming out ready to go the distance, and he just runs up on em and starts throwing wrecking balls. It's incredibly aggressive, compared to a lot of grandmasters' slower approach
@@TristanWeijermars What? The commentator literally says, "Magnus is more familiar with [the Ruy Lopez opening]... Magnus instantly develops his knight, knowing exactly what to do." It's clearly a memorization thing. Top level play is exactly this, memorize the most lines until someone blunders.
You can see he's already hovering over his next piece a half-second after he moves one, quite literally several moves ahead and anticipating his opponents counters before they do them. From this one vid I learned you can't be afraid to use your queen to clear out the board, even though it's amateur instinct (and perhaps misguided chivalry) that makes us protect our Queens.
This is now one of my favourite videos because it has Lars Monsen featured. Love this man! He's Norway's man when it comes to outdoors activities. He's on the national broadcasting company NRK. Also, love Isklar!
I now want to play against Carlsen, not because I have a chance of winning, but because I want to see if I can make Carlsen take more time and moves to beat me than he did for Bill Gates.
ele é o Magnus Carlsen, o melhor jogador de xadrez de todos os tempos. não é modo de falar, ele literalmente é o melhor jogador de xadrez que já passou pela Terra conhecido.
Fun video. Just a little suggestion, can you keep the board on top up at all times and also in the same position. Every time it disappears and reappears or moves, it's hard to get reoriented. Thanks
The Carlsen vs. Karjakin game lasted 40 moves. They got 2 seconds bonus for each move. So 40*2 is one minute and 20 seconds. Carlsen's clock showed 1 minute and 49 seconds at the end of the game, which means he had used 1 minutes and 13 seconds (they start with 3 minutes and 2 seconds) of his clock but also 1 minutes and 20 seconds of bonus time, in total that's 2 minutes and 33 seconds. Still quick, but not "only around one minute" like is said in this video. Please be more accurate.
3:07 It is not a free pawn and there is no trade of knight and bishop. Of course the combo is winning, but this description is not right. He sacrifices his night for a pawn, and then wins back another pawn.
As someone who knows almost nothing about chess, but has memorized every possible move for tic tac toe, it feels to me like Magnus is the kind of guy who memorizes the best move in all situations rather than the kind of person who calculates them.
He's much scarier though as he's both. Hi literally can memorize and recall previously played chess matches as well as a madman in analyzing new positions
there are only 3^9 possible tic tac toe arrangements while there are like ~10^40 legal chess positions... you really think anyone would be capable of memorizing it all?
@starseed3705 I heard something about a super computer had calculated the legal positions to be 10^123 some years ago. Don't know if it's true, but I've heard several suggestions over 10^100
This gave me flashbacks to when I was 11 in the school chess club. There was this one douchebag that was older than me and kept moving one of my pawns back because he said I wasn't allowed to move it like that (i was moving it forwards 2 and he was convinced I'd already moved it despite it being on the starting space still). After I moved it back in response he just went "illegal move, you forfeit" and went up to tell the teacher running the club that he'd won (there was like a leaderboard thing that determined who got to go to competitions so it was relevant). I'm surprised by how irked the current me is in remembering this lol.
@@BuddhaSunn I know I only commented this 2 days ago but I forgot I did and was really confused and surprised by this reply for some reason haha. I did, though I was late for school that day so the vice-principal had to drive me there as I’d missed the team leaving via van. Thanks for asking :)
Well, he's the number one right now and definitely one of the best. But these were all also very fast-paced games, which is not normally how strength at chess is measured by. Also the jury is still out on if he is the best ever.
damn bro what setting do you have your butt plug to buzz at? I'm almost pro I just got use to the butt plug but I'm still learning the buzzing my guy sends me. Who knew chest was so fun!
@@lightsefron Lol... no, the improperly accused of cheating human being, Hans. Magnus pulling out of the Sinquefield cup the way he did was highly unprofessional, and as unprofessional as him resigning in 1 move against Hans. What a man-baby. But think what you like.
From my view, the knight move for Bill Gates is a complete beginner move not because it’s bad in normal play but because he is attacked the pieces when he should be defending as much as he can against checkmate.
magnus winning not only means that he is skilled, but also their opponents made mistakes, like the mate in 9 moves was a big blunder. you didn't include time increments in the total time use, so the time is actually higher. even if you did, which would have been less clickbait, it's still an extremely good result for magnus