Chess Pro Explains How to Spot Cheaters (ft. GothamChess) | WIRED

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  • čas přidán 27. 11. 2022
  • "Only a bot would play that!" Sacrificing a Queen in chess is a move you're much more likely to see a bot make as opposed to a human, as humans want to protect the game's most valuable piece. In the wake of the recent chess cheating scandal, Levy Rozman from GothamChess explains how you actually cheat at chess. Using artificial intelligence, see how people use everything from bathroom cell phones to ear pieces to try to skirt the rules and gain an edge.
    Check out Levy's CZcams channel: / @gothamchess
    Director: Lisandro Perez-Rey
    Director of Photography: Charlie Jordan
    Editor: Louville Moore
    Talent: Levy Rozman
    Line Producer: Joseph Buscemi
    Associate Producer: Samantha Vélez
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    Production Coordinator: Fernando Davila
    Camera Operator: Corey Eisenstein
    Audio: Brett Van Deusen
    Production Assistant: Patrick Sargent
    Post Production Supervisor: Alexa Deutsch
    Post Production Coordinator: Ian Bryant
    Supervising Editor: Doug Larsen
    Assistant Editor: Ben Harowitz
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Komentáře • 4,5K

  • @GothamChess
    @GothamChess Před rokem +34622

    Thanks so much for having me, Wired! :)

  • @TheSuperImmortalKing
    @TheSuperImmortalKing Před rokem +7298

    I sacrifice my queen all the time and nobody has accused me of being a bot. Just because I lose my game, doesn't mean I'm not cheating.

    • @bellewjoshua7112
      @bellewjoshua7112 Před rokem +83

      Yea same here

    • @mistermiggens5555
      @mistermiggens5555 Před rokem +295

      yeah this seems very scripted. the queen sac example could have been found out by anybody over 1k

    • @jermeyplunkett3744
      @jermeyplunkett3744 Před rokem +49

      Definitely, i play chess to find opportunities to do moves like this sacrifice it's my main motivation to play finding the "impossible" moves
      More accurately "improbable" moves

    • @milico2935
      @milico2935 Před rokem +167

      He's refering to sacrifices that are not very obvious. If you see gms playing engines for example the way they sacrifice pieces is very different, and the engine might do it completely out of the blue for no immediately seen advantage just because it evaluates the position as better
      The example here was just very bad

    • @kringle7804
      @kringle7804 Před rokem +4

      ​@mistermiggens but you often don't see cheaters in those elo levels as much as you do in lower ones.
      Sure they do cheat but it's alot more obvious

  • @lorddarthvader2215
    @lorddarthvader2215 Před rokem +2594

    Me : " Blunders my Queen"
    Levy : He sacrificed the Queen. Only a bot can come up with that move.

    • @rainchopper898
      @rainchopper898 Před 11 měsíci +126

      He also said that no human has ever made a move like the sacrifice that he showcased. This is misleading. It was a bad example.
      Rest of his ideas were really informative

    • @octobsession3061
      @octobsession3061 Před 10 měsíci +34

      ​@@rainchopper898Pin of shame. Dude, not everyone watching this video is high-rated chess nerd, like come on, any 1k would probably see mate in 3 or 4 occasionally, it's just an example he gave to wider range public, the sacrifice which are not so obvious.

    • @case6189
      @case6189 Před 10 měsíci

      @@octobsession3061high rated chess nerd? On a chess website 1000 elo is practically still a beginner lmfao. The example sucked Levy talking out of his butt this is why he’s only good for teaching scrubs

    • @Ruzzky_Bly4t
      @Ruzzky_Bly4t Před 10 měsíci +21

      @@rainchopper898 He said that no human has ever made that particular sequence of moves. Not any sequence resembling that one. Obviously, he knows that people make queen sacrifices sometimes.

    • @yeetmaster9010
      @yeetmaster9010 Před 9 měsíci +6

      @@rainchopper898 No, but said move is surrounded by so many other red flags.

  • @cmd31220
    @cmd31220 Před rokem +2848

    I just love how if you're called a bot in literally any other game, it means you're really bad.
    But in chess, it means you're amazing

    • @arthurb6882
      @arthurb6882 Před rokem +46

      in what games does it mean you're bad?

    • @Rarezites
      @Rarezites Před rokem +194

      ​@@arthurb6882 For example, Minecraft, CoD, Fortnite, that stuff.

    • @toxicteapot7941
      @toxicteapot7941 Před rokem +172

      @@arthurb6882 league of legends, dota, and other mmos, you're being called bad if you are called a bot.

    • @locrianphantom3547
      @locrianphantom3547 Před rokem +4

      @Mark Berenger That’s the point…

    • @NoryLevi
      @NoryLevi Před rokem +54

      Because in these game developers dont want to put a perfect bot in, AI in these games are designed to train players to be ready for iron or bronze gameplay. If you take a look at FIFA for example, the hardest difficulty (UT Ultimate) is like top 0.5% between players. Even in Dota, Open AI Five beat OG 2-0 after OG won back to back International

  • @risingscum1865
    @risingscum1865 Před rokem +10842

    One time I was playing against a guy and as I was about to checkmate he pulled out a comically large pawn and knocked down all my pieces and then told me I got pawned. I think he might have been cheating but idk, he said it was a hidden rule.

    • @hughg.rection8567
      @hughg.rection8567 Před rokem +207

      Lmaoooo

    • @cheatlink11
      @cheatlink11 Před rokem +767

      Grow your elo to grandmaster with this one weird trick!

    • @alexepic3255
      @alexepic3255 Před rokem +271

      Should had read the pawn's effects in the bottom of the card

    • @dapperraptor8075
      @dapperraptor8075 Před rokem +183

      Google en passant

    • @LightPink
      @LightPink Před rokem +97

      When child my brother told me pawns can hop over other pieces and capture. I was amazed at this new rule and promptly lost that game.

  • @anirbanchakraborty1464
    @anirbanchakraborty1464 Před rokem +12893

    Levy is so consistent that he has started posting on other channels too.
    Incredible

    • @sabiiiir
      @sabiiiir Před rokem +49

      Your comment is funny bro👍

    • @chauncyquest2779
      @chauncyquest2779 Před rokem +166

      This one was less clickbaity though!

    • @Reality9111
      @Reality9111 Před rokem +21

      I am routinely impressed by his dedication to posting content and always bringing the same energy in every video.

    • @mikeymouse4629
      @mikeymouse4629 Před rokem +8

      I think Levy's video above has some major flaws in the logic presented.
      Just because your opponent sacrificed all of his pieces and yet won doesn't necessarily mean they cheated... they could just be playing on 'another level'.

    • @MultiTrace22
      @MultiTrace22 Před rokem +1

      LOL

  • @kilorl.
    @kilorl. Před 6 měsíci +575

    Levy in this video: "sacrificing pieces is something a human would never do, those moves are very bot-like"
    Levy on his main channel: THE ROOOOOOOOK

  • @ultimamateria1604
    @ultimamateria1604 Před 7 měsíci +168

    The first mate he used is actually a pretty common mating pattern, the sacrifice is nice but the double bishop mate is a bodens mate and ive practiced it a lot on lichess, i could totes see a player spotting that move

    • @Buf037
      @Buf037 Před 5 měsíci +20

      yeah the queen sacrifice wasn't super hard to find, it was more the fact that he had to sac his knight to even get to that point

    • @nickdasher5501
      @nickdasher5501 Před 4 měsíci +10

      Yeah like it was a nice sequence and not the easiest to find, but it's not like an unsolvable puzzle. If you post that position on r/chess I bet a lot of people would figure it out. Strange to use that particular example

    • @fennecbesixdouze1794
      @fennecbesixdouze1794 Před 4 měsíci

      Sacrificing the knight was completely intuitive, it opens up a completely devastating f-file on a vulnerable king with tempo.@@Buf037

    • @properp6922
      @properp6922 Před 2 měsíci +1

      totes? is the full word too much time? you just typed an essay and ended on a strange made up word just wondering?

    • @Buf037
      @Buf037 Před 2 měsíci

      @@properp6922 🤓

  • @pauldraper1736
    @pauldraper1736 Před rokem +9261

    The most suspicious moves are not sacrificial moves, but weird positional stuff.
    Like moving the queen back one space because 5 moves later it's gonna save you a tempo.

    • @NathanHedglin
      @NathanHedglin Před rokem +1462

      Exactly this. Plenty of examples of queen sacrifices by humans.
      I saw one where the computer said to move a perfectly safe king. Made zero sense to a human that can't see 25 moved ahead.

    • @jasonruff1270
      @jasonruff1270 Před rokem +589

      Yeah, I felt that example was a bit too simple,.

    • @jasonruff1270
      @jasonruff1270 Před rokem +857

      Yeah I think he gave this example because it was simple and he was trying to cater to a mainstream audience

    • @rcmag13
      @rcmag13 Před rokem +479

      Agreed. This video is misleading as any good chess player would sacrifice a queen if it led to a checkmate in 2 to 3 moves. Its the niche positional ones that are like, what the?

    • @siltzi
      @siltzi Před rokem +114

      Absolutely, you can almost instantly tell if someone is cheating by those moves. Random king move in the middle of a game that seems to achieve nothing (happens in lower elo and very high elo tho sometimes), or those weird queen/bishop one tile moves when there seems to be more forward progessing moves available.

  • @hyperthreaded
    @hyperthreaded Před rokem +1807

    I'm a chess noob, but it looks to me like Wired cut the recording of Levy's computer move analysis into random confusing bits and pieces for dramatic effect because they don't trust their viewers to concentrate and stay attentive for more than 20 seconds.

    • @mysticseven6578
      @mysticseven6578 Před rokem +155

      If you'd like to see a video where Levy had the chance to explain in more detail, check out any of his chess cheating videos (try searching for "Gothamchess cheaters"). In those videos, he breaks down the games in funny but educational ways.

    • @Trippze
      @Trippze Před rokem +31

      @@mysticseven6578 bro he obviously knows that he referred to him by his first name

    • @mysticseven6578
      @mysticseven6578 Před rokem +65

      @@Trippze Fair point! I was more talking to new viewers, but apologies to Olaf if I came off as condescending.

    • @doicaretho6851
      @doicaretho6851 Před rokem +71

      @@mysticseven6578 Don't apologize, that other guy is just being a jackass. There was no reason for him to say that. And thanks for the recommendation.

    • @jean8252
      @jean8252 Před rokem +7

      They think everyone has zoomer attention span

  • @ultimatestuff7111
    @ultimatestuff7111 Před rokem +166

    0:09 does make some sense because it’s checkmate in only 2, however a human would probably sac the bishop instead of queen but I think it’s because psychologically an opponent is way more likely to take a queen than bishop

    • @Zombie_MB
      @Zombie_MB Před 10 měsíci +46

      I don’t think it was even than crazy of an idea. It’s not hard to spot that move.
      Maybe the engine getting him to the position to be able to do this is what was fishy? Idk.

    • @ultimatestuff7111
      @ultimatestuff7111 Před 10 měsíci +4

      @@Zombie_MB it’s not but maybe the queen sac is not human, a human would sac the bishop

    • @Taterzz
      @Taterzz Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@ultimatestuff7111 why? the queen would have more power if the sacrifice didn't go through and easily take 3 pieces while also dogging on the king.

    • @Victor_Gabriele
      @Victor_Gabriele Před 8 měsíci +10

      ​@@TaterzzBasically: The queen sacrifice is human, but the Knight sacrifice that led to this is unhuman

    • @twainrocks4771
      @twainrocks4771 Před 8 měsíci +2

      I think most players over 1k elo are spotting a queen or bishop sacrifice mate

  • @SchadenfreudeUY
    @SchadenfreudeUY Před rokem +87

    0:54 3 huge questions
    1. why does a treadmill have chess
    2. why does it's chess contain a GM level AI
    3. where can I get one

    • @irrelevant_noob
      @irrelevant_noob Před rokem +6

      1. To incentivize the user while they're doing something incredibly monotonous...
      2. Because why not? xD
      3. Guess you could ask at the gym that Levy was talking about... Sadly, i don't know the details, but maybe they're somewhere on the internet.

  • @hexagonk9665
    @hexagonk9665 Před rokem +6272

    As an AI, I can affirm his statements are indeed solid.

    • @tayar3797
      @tayar3797 Před rokem +55

      Beeeeeep bop bleep boop beep

    • @HoUrZ343
      @HoUrZ343 Před rokem +57

      @@SpeedyProduction Why'd you make 5 comments xd

    • @YST187
      @YST187 Před rokem +2

      Like seriously lads, he is an AI

    • @Robert-Italy
      @Robert-Italy Před rokem +8

      Don't anthropomorphize the robots - they hate when you do that.

    • @jahjoeka
      @jahjoeka Před rokem

      I like chat bots

  • @somerandomdudefes31
    @somerandomdudefes31 Před rokem +1556

    That example felt more like a normal chess puzzle than a cheater scenario, but other than that, great video.

    • @auzad3s601
      @auzad3s601 Před rokem +22

      Well the point is that is very unlikely to see a so risky sacrifice sequence (there is the knight’s one also) in let’s say 10-12 sec, maybe Magnus, Hikaru and some others super GM could but…

    • @shtuffs
      @shtuffs Před rokem +204

      @@auzad3s601 no pretty much any competent player can figure out that mate pretty quickly. Humans are generally pretty good at attacking moves but it's usually the positional long termoves that they struggle more at. I think he used a bad example here

    • @danelyn.1374
      @danelyn.1374 Před rokem +63

      exactly, thought this was a bit weird. I feel like Levy gave a more simplified explanation for this as there probably would be moves that are definitely a lot of tactics that might actually be suspicious, but probably was a lot harder to explain in an interview than a 3-move tactic
      plus I suppose he's mostly explaining cheaters at a low elo, probably

    • @nmul8950
      @nmul8950 Před rokem +8

      @@shtuffsgood example explained poorly. the main point is that the opponent doesnt have to recapture, and u seemingly gain nothing by keeping ur queen in danger only defended by a flimsy tactic

    • @Av-uv6xu
      @Av-uv6xu Před rokem +1

      Time control is very important here. Online chess, not classical. Carlsen said that he only need to get the hint when to look up for something to win majority of his games, so he would prob took his time and find this ez when someone said: now, but during the regular online which is usually blitz game, not really a chance to even search for something that crazy.

  • @digital5535
    @digital5535 Před rokem +17

    ‘A human would never play that move’
    Me who makes random moves: you have yet to reach my level

  • @robertzeurunkl8401
    @robertzeurunkl8401 Před rokem +917

    Queen to D5 is actually a BRILLIANT move. It's Mate in 4.

    • @robertzeurunkl8401
      @robertzeurunkl8401 Před rokem +98

      0:20 - Ooops. I should have just waited.

    • @danielyuan9862
      @danielyuan9862 Před rokem +316

      Yes, that's why Levy said it was a "non-human" move. Although, to be honest, that move is very human.

    • @tth-2507
      @tth-2507 Před rokem +116

      ​@@thedayofnewage That sacrifice will win the game - a reasonably good player (~1200ELO) will see and play that. Turned the video off after that.

    • @patrickdervan3444
      @patrickdervan3444 Před rokem +211

      @@tth-2507 If you watched the video, you'd see he wasn't just commenting on the queen's move but also on the moves leading up to that sacrifice

    • @tth-2507
      @tth-2507 Před rokem +36

      @@patrickdervan3444 Then the intro of the video is cut very badly - further strengthening my believe that the video is not worth watching.

  • @roottwo5459
    @roottwo5459 Před rokem +1019

    That was literally the most tame queen "sacrifice" ever. A human would absolutely play that move.

    • @1c0nic_player
      @1c0nic_player Před rokem +129

      they would have to be decent to find it still but yeah, its a bad example

    • @paolosworld99
      @paolosworld99 Před rokem +76

      Anyone who has messed around for 30mins in lichess puzzles would be able to find that mate in 2 easy.

    • @anonymously94
      @anonymously94 Před rokem +89

      @@paolosworld99 It's not a mate in 2. Black doesn't have to capture the queen.

    • @taleladar
      @taleladar Před rokem +2

      @@anonymously94 If black doesn't capture the queen, there's another followup move white can make that's instant checkmate. If white does other things to try to postpone or get out of that checkmate, their position suffers or they lose material.

    • @anonymously94
      @anonymously94 Před rokem +14

      @@taleladar There is no immediate mate for white if black doesn't capture the queen, unless black makes a blunder.

  • @maxkappert9795
    @maxkappert9795 Před rokem +2553

    Tbh Levy explained it very well but the example could have been chosen better

    • @MaxLennon
      @MaxLennon Před rokem +758

      A real example would probably have been like 10 moves long and the average audience member wouldn't have been able to follow, is my thinking.

    • @samuelblackmon
      @samuelblackmon Před rokem +140

      It's a decent example for low elo

    • @TheCagedK
      @TheCagedK Před rokem +187

      @@MaxLennon the best explanation would be a endgame example when the chess ai unexplainably sacs a queen to get an extremely niche mate trap

    • @resir9807
      @resir9807 Před rokem +90

      I just don't get why black takes the queen. Like I get it's a noob but it's literally a 1 move calculation

    • @jayadratha9836
      @jayadratha9836 Před rokem +38

      ​@@resir9807 Black shouldn't take the queen, but the move is still very strong even if you don't "fall for it." Qd5 threatens the knight on c6. Move the knight and you lose the rook on a8 and you're dying on the back rank. The bishop can't defend the knight because the queen can take it if it goes to d7 and if it goes to b7 it stops defending e6. Qd5 is one of those moves that looks impossible at first glance, but once you see it is possible then it becomes crushing.
      It isn't an example of a "bot move" at higher levels, since it'd be easily findable by a good player, but if played quickly at low levels it'd certainly be suspicious.

  • @pauld8379
    @pauld8379 Před 11 měsíci +181

    I had a great game recently, I won with a dubious checkmate. I used the computer analysis to see what the computer thought of my game. I had a 66% accuracy lol

    • @ComradeChams
      @ComradeChams Před 10 měsíci +3

      May I ask why you shared this information with us, and do you consider it to be a rather high, or low accuracy?

    • @pauld8379
      @pauld8379 Před 10 měsíci +11

      @@ComradeChams since then I had a 93% and a 96% once

    • @BarSalad
      @BarSalad Před 9 měsíci +25

      @@ComradeChamslate comment but the context is: sometimes you end a game feeling that you played great, then you look at the computer analysis afterwards and realize you made a bunch of mistakes. In terms of accuracy percentage, it really depends on the game (disparity between players, if someone makes a significant blunder, opening knowledge, etc) but being in the 60% range is not good

    • @mghtutookhaung5449
      @mghtutookhaung5449 Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@BarSalad its depends, I can score about 80+ accuracy against 1200s and win most games, but always score around 60~ against 1800s and lost most games. So you can't decide your play is good or bad by the accuracy alone.

    • @BarSalad
      @BarSalad Před 9 měsíci

      @@mghtutookhaung5449 that’s already covered in my comment

  • @filyboy7
    @filyboy7 Před rokem +221

    levy has really become the go-to guy for all chess content catered to the general masses. being a long time chess fan myself, i never really liked levy's videos, but i respect the hustle, and him making it to the top.

    • @brushtooth6636
      @brushtooth6636 Před rokem +3

      He definetly deserves this as well, pretty charismstic, a but controversial but entertaining

    • @Nomazzz
      @Nomazzz Před rokem +17

      @@brushtooth6636 how is he controversial? Jusk askin started watching him just a few months ago

    • @TheZombieSlayerWave
      @TheZombieSlayerWave Před rokem +1

      he's ovbiously cheaper and less busy than the serious players.

    • @falc0n12
      @falc0n12 Před rokem +32

      @@Nomazzz he’s not controversial at all, i have no idea what these people are saying

    • @Nomazzz
      @Nomazzz Před rokem +2

      @@falc0n12 hahah that was my first reaction too

  • @notmenotme614
    @notmenotme614 Před rokem +2292

    It’s interesting that when Gary Kasparov played Deep Blue, he thought IBM were cheating for the opposite reason… the computer suddenly changed its personality where it wouldn’t take predictable risks and cautiousness is a very human emotion.
    Gary tried to bait the computer but for some reason the computer wouldn’t take his piece. Imagine doing a move like the one in this video, when white goes to sacrifice their Queen and the black pawn just ignores it. He said it was the only computer (at the time) that wouldn’t take a high value piece when it could.

    • @PBMS123
      @PBMS123 Před rokem +55

      Unless you can see literally 2 moves ahead and go, wel gee if i take the queen, I'm moving my pawn out of the way of that bishop, dun dun. Although, the queen being there can also take and then you have check again.

    • @notmenotme614
      @notmenotme614 Před rokem +123

      @@PBMS123 He described early computers as materialistic rather than thinking ahead . If they could take a high value piece, now, then they would. He also played a few games against the computer (maybe best of 5) and said the computers playing style or personality suddenly changed.
      If you haven’t seen it already, I highly recommend watching the documentary, I think it’s called “Game Over: Kasparov and the Machine”

    • @Rsconquest
      @Rsconquest Před rokem +25

      @@notmenotme614 Early computers would overevaluate material after a long sequence. However, if they spot checkmate in a couple of moves after potentially taking a piece they just won't take.

    • @hansmahr8627
      @hansmahr8627 Před rokem +68

      This is not what happened in the Deep Blue match. Kasparov didn't bait the computer to take one of his pieces. There were two instances in the second match Kasparov played against Deep Blue that Kasparov found suspicious. In the first instance, Deep Blue avoided a variation that would have allowed it to win two pawns. It wasn't the best variation but engines back then didn't have a very good evaluation system and valued material gains more highly than other factors because material is easy to calculate.
      The second and more famous instance was in the last game of the match. Kasparov played a dubious opening with the black pieces because he thought that Deep Blue wouldn't be able to accurately evaluate it. The opening was dubious because there was a well-known knight sacrifice for white that refuted the line. Engines back then didn't go for sacrifices unless they would immediately lead to a win so Kasparov was sure that Deep Blue wouldn't go for it. But it did and Kasparov lost the game. To this day Kasparov claims that this move was not played by Deep Blue but that a human chess player made the move. After all, the knight sacrifice was well-known among high-level chess players. However, the Deep Blue team claimed that they had entered this exact line into the opening book of Deep Blue before the game. That would be a huge coincidence but who knows.

    • @whannabi
      @whannabi Před rokem +8

      @@hansmahr8627 and they did not even allow him a rematch...

  • @mrfake5251
    @mrfake5251 Před rokem +956

    Levy has really come so far, I'm really proud of him.

  • @larsf478
    @larsf478 Před rokem +13

    To be fair, at 0:01 there is no safe square for the Queen...
    And you would only have tonlook 2 moves ahead.
    That move alone seems very reasonable to me.

    • @telite7263
      @telite7263 Před rokem +5

      My thought exactly. Finding a queen sacrifice resulting in mate in one doesn’t mean that they’re cheating. Granted, if they’re low ELO, it’s possible they could be, but I digress

  • @trampy6449
    @trampy6449 Před rokem +2318

    Levy is just such a great chess player, both professionally and on stream and video. Congrats for getting onto wired!

    • @rikittu
      @rikittu Před rokem +19

      Also a great chess explainer. Watched one of his videos randomly and it was very entertaining and informative. I know basically just a little more than the basics about chess and his video had me hooked.

    • @Morphysince94
      @Morphysince94 Před rokem +2

      great chess player? either you're patronizing af or I read dat wrong

    • @ninous26
      @ninous26 Před rokem +6

      Hes not a Grandmaster and he will never be one per his own admission. There are thousands of grandmasters

    • @quintapusyt
      @quintapusyt Před rokem

      Yea I highly recommend checking him out if you haven't already!

    • @Unpug
      @Unpug Před rokem

      Ikr

  • @pagp97
    @pagp97 Před rokem +222

    To be honest, that Qd5 at the beginning is so majestic and not suspicious at all, the move itself does not mean cheating. The combination to get to that position though, may indicate otherwise

    • @ranDOm9431
      @ranDOm9431 Před rokem +11

      In combination with the knight sacrifice, it was a very weird move. On its own it would’ve been fine.

    • @bramvanduijn8086
      @bramvanduijn8086 Před rokem

      @@ranDOm9431The knight sacrifice makes perfect sense to me: It keeps pressure on the black king. Whenever you can control your opponent's king you should.

  • @gaelarturo2825
    @gaelarturo2825 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Levy was holding the urge to scream THE QUEEN

  • @GMFossAnderson
    @GMFossAnderson Před rokem +9

    0:22 personally i would of seen that. Am i a ROBOT?!?!

  • @Bruh-bk6yo
    @Bruh-bk6yo Před rokem +2107

    I love how Levy can be both serious and funny. Especially at GTE🤣

  • @adwaawddw4730
    @adwaawddw4730 Před rokem +109

    Someone asked Kasparov about this and I found his answer very interesting-he said that at the grandmaster level, all a cheater needs to know is that they have a winning move. This is a signal that only has to be done once-making it incredibly hard to detect-because at grandmaster level it only takes 1 major mistake or oversight to lose the game entirely.

    • @AllTheArtsy
      @AllTheArtsy Před rokem +30

      Nakamura basically said the same thing in his podcast ep with Lex Fridman. Not even winning move but just a more advantageous move- just a signal so he will spend more time and find it. The explanation is fine, but the example given is for the non-players, for sure.

  • @rannithewitch3180
    @rannithewitch3180 Před 8 měsíci

    i was training a specific queen gambit yesterday, my opponent followed all the moves I had in mind, I reacted super fast, and asked me if I was cheating lmao...he just saw later that I only had the advantage at beggining

  • @blademastedgaming5385
    @blademastedgaming5385 Před 11 měsíci +5

    Me: plays e5
    Levy: a human would never play that

  • @leventcelik6597
    @leventcelik6597 Před rokem +118

    Hikaru mentioned that you can cheat by simply relating a single beep.
    Beep means there's an important move to pay attention. If you know a move exists, you try hard to find it.
    No beep means the moves are not hard to find. You don't lose time.

    • @AbhishekKumar-xx7li
      @AbhishekKumar-xx7li Před rokem +12

      This is actually right. When you are solving a chess puzzles you try hard to spot the tactic but in normal games, most moves look simple and mundane.

    • @rdr6269
      @rdr6269 Před rokem +5

      One beep for important defensive move, two beeps important offensive move, three beeps important move which is defensive but is also offensive. How about that?

    • @TypicalAsian355
      @TypicalAsian355 Před rokem +1

      Then the thing malfunctions and there’s never a beep

    • @Thelaretus
      @Thelaretus Před rokem +6

      Coughing works too.

    • @AbhishekKumar-xx7li
      @AbhishekKumar-xx7li Před rokem +2

      @@rdr6269 Omg! You ppl now will make chess match happen in an enclosed cell.

  • @LeventButSpeedrunning
    @LeventButSpeedrunning Před rokem +610

    That position was probably not the best example, but still understandable by every level of player. Nice job!

    • @kaptenkrok8123
      @kaptenkrok8123 Před rokem +107

      I thought the same those moves are definately not beyond levys capabilities

    • @aidancooper9498
      @aidancooper9498 Před rokem +29

      Paul Morphy would play like that for even less compensation, lol

    • @tedros6917
      @tedros6917 Před rokem +48

      I feel like they edited it weird. even as a relative beginner, I've done puzzles that have used similar ideas so I think it's very likely even intermediate players would spot it

    • @Trip_Fontaine
      @Trip_Fontaine Před rokem +11

      Yeah, I'd be pretty uncomfortable playing anywhere that would deem me a cheater for making such moves. Those moves seem well within what even like an 1800-rated player could do, especially in slower time controls.
      I'm going through a tactics trainer intended for players around 1600 and some of the puzzles are not much easier than that. Of course, when you tell someone there is something to find like in a puzzle, it's easier than finding the same thing out of the blue in a real game.

    • @utoherozv
      @utoherozv Před rokem +4

      agreed! I don't think I would have found it, but it didn't look that crazy.

  • @Ashlevon
    @Ashlevon Před 6 měsíci +14

    *sacrifices one or two pieces for a 3-turn play you've been planning for the past 4 turns*
    GothamChess: "That's an AI move right there, no doubt about it."

  • @amatya.rakshasa
    @amatya.rakshasa Před 8 měsíci

    “Vibrating device” 🤣🤣🤣

  • @Loki1v9
    @Loki1v9 Před rokem +2864

    The first example is tragically bad imo
    I guess its fine not to give a new player that credit but the King is very obviously vulnerable and you only need to think 1 move ahead to conclude Queen sacrifice

    • @finesseandstyle
      @finesseandstyle Před rokem +443

      It's an exaggerated example that explains his point pretty well IMO.
      He then says that the bot does that but worse and pretty much at every turn.

    • @Manakyn
      @Manakyn Před rokem +597

      It may have been edited poorly by Wired (which they are known to do). Its possible his example was more in depth and they only kept the last part.

    • @bleekcer
      @bleekcer Před rokem +343

      @@Manakyn Yes, he talked about a sequence of moves, and Wired probably showed only the end.

    • @JoshuaVance1124
      @JoshuaVance1124 Před rokem +185

      Yeah I’m almost sure they simplified it. Most likely gotham explained a longer sequence and they just showed the end, or he had a different example and wired vetoed it because it was too confusing. This is meant to be for people who don’t play chess so the example couldn’t be too complicated

    • @Kauk77
      @Kauk77 Před rokem +91

      I think he or Eric Rosen has a video explaining that position and it is actually a very deep move because accepting the queen results in checkmate, but declining the queen isn't possible either without losing. Thing is, in that position you can decline the sacrifice in a variety of ways, and you have to find refutations for all of them. Not only you'd have to calculate a large number of possible lines but you would also have to have the confidence that you aren't wrong in any of them

  • @heroclix0rz
    @heroclix0rz Před rokem +502

    That queen gambit is really straight forward. It's mate in 2. I get that there are other queen sacs that only a computer would see, but I would expect anyone as good as Levy to see that particular example.

    • @cheshire1
      @cheshire1 Před rokem +131

      Keep in mind that most of the people watching this channel aren't chess players. You can't really expect them to understand why the actual moves that GMs consider 'bot moves' are even good at all.

    • @XCMasterchief
      @XCMasterchief Před rokem +37

      that was my first thought too, but it's also contingent on Ng5+ being found first. It's a tough find but not unreasonable

    • @adamwoolston253
      @adamwoolston253 Před rokem +52

      Definitely a believable human move, but real bot moves sac the queen the uncork some ten move combo that a general audience wouldn’t be able to follow lol. Also I’d say it depends on rating. A 500 finding a queen sac for mate in 2 is sus.

    • @LauriKarjanlahti
      @LauriKarjanlahti Před rokem +15

      Im pretty sure that example was more about finding that knight sac. You know now that it works, but you dont normally simply even consider and calculate a move like that because moving a knight under attack when your own queen is already under one is very counter intuitive.

    • @rcmag13
      @rcmag13 Před rokem +4

      @@LauriKarjanlahti I've done it before but I'm a very aggressive player. I think a lot of the moves were edited out as this example is pretty bad at best.

  • @kaibigan7084
    @kaibigan7084 Před rokem +3

    That knight and queen sacrifices are easier tricks than what i sometimes saw when i was young. Furhermore, that sacrifices are much easier to spot than most of chess puzzles solution that sometimes an amatuer can see!

  • @RamgateTV
    @RamgateTV Před rokem +5

    When someone sacrificing quenn for nothing or exchange for a pawn you might think first there is something or it was just a blunder.

  • @E_D___
    @E_D___ Před rokem +1760

    If someone moves his queen like that in a game your first thought would be "wtf is this??? Is it just a bait or am I dead already"
    When someone does this kind of move you know you are in a problem not because you think the enemy is cheating, but because you know your opponent had to have a reason to do this "idiotic " move

    • @crabman2
      @crabman2 Před rokem +46

      then just sacrifice your queen and hope they’re scared to take it lmao (they always take it hence why it works)

    • @E_D___
      @E_D___ Před rokem +31

      @@mhkk1491 I don't think you need to be a grandmaster to suspect a bait vs a blander.
      It depends on how much time is left (is he in a rush?), The playstyle your op had till that point, and how obvious it is.
      In this example the fact the queen can die is super obvious, so unless it was a missclick or op nearly put of time, it is probably a bait

    • @GuidoHaverkort
      @GuidoHaverkort Před rokem +1

      Unless you're 600 like me

    • @sws212
      @sws212 Před rokem +60

      The example is literally just an oversimplified version of it for the audience. This is not actually a video for chess pros, dude. The real life example is them giving up their queen for a checkmate 4 or 5 moves away which not even most grandmasters can do.

    • @aminulhussain2277
      @aminulhussain2277 Před rokem +8

      @Richard L Probably just wired editing away the rest of the footage leaving only that single move for the initial example.

  • @user-ok4ql8nw6q
    @user-ok4ql8nw6q Před rokem +782

    Levy: No human in history has ever played a sequence of moves like that.
    Mikhail Tal: Am I a joke to you?

  • @OhBeEye
    @OhBeEye Před 9 měsíci

    That was a fantastic time. Thanks!

  • @AGHathaway
    @AGHathaway Před 9 měsíci

    Literally, the first example shown any high-rated player could spot. It's not that complicated of a Queen sacrifice. White has aggressively placed bishop pairs and Black's King is exposed. Maybe in a blitz game that might be difficult, but even in a rapid game that isn't that hard to spot. Honestly, if that were a puzzle it would be around 1900-2000 rated puzzle, which really isn't that high.

  • @TheWizardsOfOz
    @TheWizardsOfOz Před rokem +84

    "If it can go into your shoe, it can go to other places" - Levy Rozman, 2022

  • @khoa4k266
    @khoa4k266 Před rokem +105

    I would never think that gotham chess would get on wired

  • @justaguywholistentomusics

    imagine competing a player that play chess good and you accused him of cheating

  • @Hrishiraj2003
    @Hrishiraj2003 Před 5 měsíci +9

    Mikhail Tal: I didn't know I was a cheater my entire career.

  • @costelo_6297
    @costelo_6297 Před rokem +29

    3:33 oh yes, The Vibrating Device. Yes, in the shoe, where else? Under armpit... oh

  • @gnarls-OSRS
    @gnarls-OSRS Před 7 měsíci +11

    The funny thing is, the move he actually criticized at the end for being too “bot-like” was just a really brilliant move; sacrificing the queen for checkmate with dual bishops. (Which I do NOT think is that hard to see honestly- and I’m terrible)

    • @ZombieLincoln666
      @ZombieLincoln666 Před 3 měsíci

      I don’t see how bot-like doesn’t mean it isn’t brilliant

  • @infomatters.
    @infomatters. Před rokem +23

    3:48 he's barely holding his laugh 😂

  • @megavirusuchiha5468
    @megavirusuchiha5468 Před rokem +3

    THE ROOOOOOOOOOOOOK

  • @Ryuzakku
    @Ryuzakku Před rokem +1

    On that first one, it makes sense if you have the time of classic chess to look at the board. Sacrificing a Queen to ensure checkmate.
    Doing that in bullet or blitz though? Yeah, likely a cheater.
    Sacrificing the knight is much more of a cheater move though on that one.

  • @Quintinity
    @Quintinity Před rokem +248

    so kind of levy to bring attention to smaller channels, what a cool dude

    • @deepuniverse4840
      @deepuniverse4840 Před rokem +1

      smaller?

    • @edpsussyfortniteamogus8373
      @edpsussyfortniteamogus8373 Před rokem +1

      definitely not smaller

    • @rebel2809
      @rebel2809 Před rokem +2

      yeah, how kind of him! maybe wired will be as big as levy some day

    • @porygon-z8270
      @porygon-z8270 Před rokem +3

      @@edpsussyfortniteamogus8373 come back once you've learned what sarcasm is. Enjoy kindergarten!

    • @edpsussyfortniteamogus8373
      @edpsussyfortniteamogus8373 Před rokem

      @@porygon-z8270 be quiet dawg, reading text on a screen doesn’t as easily convey emotions or even sarcasm as easy as hearing it in person.

  • @chess
    @chess Před rokem +484

    Levy is an inspiration, great episode!

  • @LyricallyWine626
    @LyricallyWine626 Před 8 měsíci

    The first 10 seconds of this vid finally made clear to me why my father constantly gets accused of cheating when he plays online…
    If you think only a bot would sacrifice a Queen for a checkmate, then you simply haven’t met my father around the Washington Square Park in NYC yet. Baiting people with high value pieces into a mate that they never seem to see, using less valuable pieces is literally his whole MO, I shyt you not…

  • @Aleixus
    @Aleixus Před rokem +3

    Btw just asking, are we allowed to have a visual representation of all the places the opponent can move/attack?

  • @thsand5032
    @thsand5032 Před rokem +130

    The opening example feels a bit weird, I think any slightly experienced player would see that the queen to D5 move is safe because an attempt to take the queen results in immediate checkmate, and an experienced opponent would see that taking the queen results in checkmate as well.The full version of it later does however feel completely absurd.

    • @Skel_fgc
      @Skel_fgc Před rokem +2

      Yeah agreed, that Queen move is pretty normal high level stuff, but that knight play? Not so much…

    • @MrB10N1CLE
      @MrB10N1CLE Před rokem +6

      I don't think the editor knows much about chess, hence the weird opening.

  • @tomaslove9416
    @tomaslove9416 Před rokem +1365

    gotham was once despised by a whole enraged nation and even received death threats just because he accused his opponent is cheating. turned out the opponent was in fact cheating lol. :))

    • @garynico9872
      @garynico9872 Před rokem +58

      dewa kipas

    • @shingofan
      @shingofan Před rokem +28

      Out of the loop here - what's the story here?

    • @derryaryasaputra2629
      @derryaryasaputra2629 Před rokem +359

      @@shingofan GothamChess accused an Indonesian player (Dewa_Kipas) for cheating and then his account is blocked, this enraged a lot of people in the country. Long story short, GothamChess was right. You should look it up it's an interesting story how an entire country was fooled and start sending death threat over a small thing

    • @samuellinn
      @samuellinn Před rokem

      @@derryaryasaputra2629 obviously accusing a person of a certain race of cheating meant the accuser is a racist! /s

    • @godgodson1765
      @godgodson1765 Před rokem

      The opposite happened to me.... Kingscrusher accused me of cheating on ICC and I got banned and received death threats.... but my account was reinstated after revealing my identity....
      I made a rap song about him, but he had my public song removed, this one is unlisted czcams.com/video/uw3woxUbIBE/video.html

  • @bilbobaggins138
    @bilbobaggins138 Před 5 měsíci +3

    That first move was a bad example. That was easy to spot

  • @Journey22405
    @Journey22405 Před rokem

    in Isolation that queen move is something you would see occasionally but in the sequence that led up to that move you can tell its a bot.
    a human could see a queen sac mate, a bot will definitely see the queen sac will see it 5 in advance so will make all the moves necessary to make that sac mate happen.

  • @blaze556922
    @blaze556922 Před rokem +1600

    With all due respect, elite players sacrifice their Queens for victory all the time. I agree with everything else you said but in that example it was only three moves. You admitted that Grandmasters regularly think that far ahead. Especially because in that scenario the other person playing would definitely take the bait 9/ 10 times.

    • @ImGonnaOilYouUp
      @ImGonnaOilYouUp Před rokem +119

      Okay Dunning-Kruger

    • @blaze556922
      @blaze556922 Před rokem +74

      @@ImGonnaOilYouUp I'm very smarty pants 🤓 thanks though simple one.

    • @davidemirante9405
      @davidemirante9405 Před rokem +146

      @@blaze556922 In that case I don't feel what is mostly suspicious is the last queen move, but the whole sequence. Although I agree that while that move is unfindable 29 days a month for even high level common players, sequences like that, and honestly even more impressive ones, have been played throughout chess history by humans.

    • @anandasatria7734
      @anandasatria7734 Před rokem +6

      Yeah, in that sequence looked like what Tal would play

    • @danielturner1891
      @danielturner1891 Před rokem +57

      @@ImGonnaOilYouUp that’s not Dunning-Kruger, an effect that has been ironically misused. I think Levy, while doing a great job explaining, could have explained this better. Grandmasters DO sacrifice. They also do things that look, to men as a bad chess player, just as crazy.

  • @RickyJC
    @RickyJC Před rokem +200

    More people need to accept the notion of losing to improve and winning to know you did something right.

    • @cubicinfinity2
      @cubicinfinity2 Před rokem +8

      When I lose, the game was so bad that I don't want to look at the analysis. When I win, I'm more likely to analyze it because I can see what I did wrong and feel better about still winning.

  • @chilledoutgamer3232
    @chilledoutgamer3232 Před rokem +95

    I would've done that queen sacrifice. I think anyone who's read a lot of classical games as well as modern would consider that. It's just about controlling areas and bringing pressure to bear to achieve goals, that whole area with the knight and 2 bishops was already well set up of the q move.

    • @Mist_R
      @Mist_R Před rokem +16

      Exactly. The position was very straight forward, bishops beaming the king

    • @DoomBapBellic
      @DoomBapBellic Před rokem +4

      @@Mist_R so you both are confessing that you are cheaters?

    • @HowDo_IKnowBruh
      @HowDo_IKnowBruh Před rokem +15

      @@DoomBapBellic so you're confessing yourself that you never played chess?
      me neither

    • @DoomBapBellic
      @DoomBapBellic Před rokem

    • @twelvoe4205
      @twelvoe4205 Před rokem +19

      @@DoomBapBellic the move isnt actually that hard to find, i think wired edited it so only the last part of the explanation was shown

  • @unvergebeneid
    @unvergebeneid Před rokem +1

    Watching Levy absolutely losing it over some insane engine move over on his channel is my favorite thing rn 😄

  • @Googlebot123
    @Googlebot123 Před rokem +39

    "No Human In History Has Ever Played A Sequence Of Moves Like That" Mikhail Tal- Hold My Insane Queen Sacrifices

  • @blueskull7898
    @blueskull7898 Před rokem +389

    It would be weird seeing it live at first, but I don’t feel 8:58 is really a sign of cheating, since checkmate is literally only in one move after

    • @DireBowser
      @DireBowser Před rokem +112

      Wired edits the videos weird, it was probably a much more in depth explaination.

    • @ADollarMight
      @ADollarMight Před rokem +19

      it’s the sequence more so than that one move. in that position even i might be able to find that move but you have to hang the knight and queen first with no guarantee you even have a winning attack. Unless your Magnus Carlson you don’t find that, anyone under super grandmaster probably doesn’t even consider it

    • @csarmii
      @csarmii Před rokem +37

      @@ADollarMight that's not true at all. A 2000 player with good tactics skills will find sequences like that.

    • @ADollarMight
      @ADollarMight Před rokem +5

      @@csarmii not that sequence like levy says. You really don’t have any guarantees that that moves plays out unless you’re looking really far ahead like a super grandmaster and even they can miss stuff like that.

    • @csarmii
      @csarmii Před rokem +10

      @@ADollarMight sure, the actual sequence is a bit longer, but no, it's not that big of a deal at all. And Magnus is not considered very good at tactics (not one of his strength) so he's not a good example on who would or would not find such a move. You don't have to be anywhere near a grandmaster, let alone super grandmaster for this.

  • @pinruihuang8463
    @pinruihuang8463 Před 8 měsíci

    TBH I might find Qd5 if i'm lucky and it's a long time control. Those are *strong* bishops.

  • @samidtaek_
    @samidtaek_ Před 8 měsíci

    They didn't include Hikaru looking at Stockfish on the ceiling

  • @unclewillibomb8683
    @unclewillibomb8683 Před rokem +38

    The first example was actually pretty easy to spot, you’re queen is being attacked so you’re looking for a square to escape to and naturally you would find d5 as the best move.

    • @pypeapple
      @pypeapple Před rokem +11

      It’s simplified to appeal and make sense to a broader audience. Someone like me who doesn’t know about more in-depth chess tactics won’t be able to follow along, but with a simple example like that, which is humanly possible to find, it makes more sense and helps get the point across

    • @ElZedLoL
      @ElZedLoL Před rokem

      This is something I for example look out for in every game cuz forced sequences initiated by sacrifice are so fun :P also this is a 2 move sequence so not too bad - king moves are more sus ^^

    • @chessandmathguy
      @chessandmathguy Před rokem +2

      Had to see Ng5 first tho

    • @perfumefemur
      @perfumefemur Před rokem +2

      @@pypeapple thank you for explaining this. I thought no one else realized that 😭

    • @Cowtymsmiesznego
      @Cowtymsmiesznego Před rokem

      @@chessandmathguy Ng5 is the only move that keeps any advantage for white at all. Not hard to see at all.

  • @RGC_animation
    @RGC_animation Před rokem +71

    The example that was chosen doesn't make too much sense for experienced players is because that position is meant for beginners to get the general ideas of bots using weird moves to cheat. Sacrificing a Queen is way more counter intuitive for a beginner than maybe a weird positional move.

    • @Justt_us
      @Justt_us Před rokem +1

      This a thing that also popped into my mind whilst seeing the video. Thanks for pointing it out!

    • @zitronenwasser
      @zitronenwasser Před rokem +1

      Yes, this is a great point

  • @Durhandoni80
    @Durhandoni80 Před rokem +1

    The first queen sacrifce looked legit.

  • @ZappninLLP
    @ZappninLLP Před 11 měsíci +14

    Thanks for this very informative video. An AI analysis post chess game is like a drug test after an Olympic performance.

  • @nathanapplegate5374
    @nathanapplegate5374 Před rokem +333

    The queen sacrifice is actually a very elegant positional play. I’ve done moves like that before. Yes, they are gambles. I’ve lost many times doing moves like that. But when it pays off, it pays off big and your opponent never saw it coming.

    • @heitorfernandes703
      @heitorfernandes703 Před rokem +5

      @@violentcabbage9424 no, he is only if he does it consistently, with high accuracy, throughout lots of games and winning near them all. Nathan probably don't have that, so no algorithm or Levy will think he is cheating.

    • @thinboxdictator6720
      @thinboxdictator6720 Před rokem +7

      @Violent Cabbage levy was wrong before and this video is good example of it.

    • @connarkent282
      @connarkent282 Před rokem +10

      @@violentcabbage9424 i saw that and like what. A human will sacrifice a Queen 😆

    • @boogersincoffee
      @boogersincoffee Před rokem +6

      Agreed, I got his point but it was not the greatest example.

    • @HazopGaze
      @HazopGaze Před rokem +6

      It sounds sort of like my general thought process. Not even related to Chess in most cases, seeing as I play only rarely and I'm a novice to boot. In other games where I am thinking strategy, sometimes even ones where I have to make very quick decisions, I often consider risky yet powerful positions because I enjoy being able to blindside an opponent, sometimes with absurd multiplayer tactics that trade 'force' - like how many people are actively able to fight a battle - with knowledge. In a team game, having a little foresight can absolutely make up for being outnumbered. Even better if a team can position themselves well and force engagements that favor them, leading to unbreakable defenses and unstoppable offenses.

  • @michaeledmunds7056
    @michaeledmunds7056 Před rokem +30

    "I would consider a non human move something that breaks principles of chess entirely."
    100 rated players: "Am I a bot...?"

  • @Miguell25
    @Miguell25 Před 9 měsíci

    i thought the knight and queen sacrifice at the end was in line with what a pro chess player might do, is that move sequence really so unrealistic? could magnus not see that opportunity?

  • @v4o82
    @v4o82 Před 9 měsíci

    Whilst I wouldn't have seen it, I don't think that queen to D5 was that obscene of a move. I know it's an example, but it's just a couple of moves.

  • @nellieb6585
    @nellieb6585 Před rokem +134

    Omg I couldn’t be more proud of Levy, he’s come so far 🥺

  • @tybera1114
    @tybera1114 Před rokem +192

    That move at the end is definitely a Waitzkin move, his pawn game was pretty crazy, and he often traded down material for positioning. While not common, there are players that do play games like that.

    • @tominieminen66
      @tominieminen66 Před rokem +27

      The example was too simplified, probably to make it easier to understand

    • @lamregina1697
      @lamregina1697 Před 7 měsíci +3

      ​@@tominieminen66he said "no human in history has ever played a sequence of moves like that. "😅

  • @shadowmanx
    @shadowmanx Před 9 měsíci

    Imagine a chess engine looking for multiple ways to kill you in real life.

  • @pavise6333
    @pavise6333 Před rokem +2

    Dewa Kipas having a seizure in the corner

  • @mysteriousstranger6857
    @mysteriousstranger6857 Před rokem +25

    I can definitely see a human playing the first move. It looks ridiculous at first, but when you look closely it's really not all that bizzare. It leads to a pretty obvious checkmate if taken (as demonstrated) and puts pressure on the knight at b6. The only recourse black has is to sacrafice bishop which completely destroys any defensibility the king's position had.

  • @pat9353
    @pat9353 Před rokem +15

    9:27 I wouldn’t say no human. Hikarus immortal game had multiple queen sacrifices. Granted it’s one of his best games for a reason.

  • @infamusmaus6091
    @infamusmaus6091 Před rokem +1

    0:12 Affirmative, each time I play against bots, both queens die before the tenth turn

  • @pettym3
    @pettym3 Před rokem

    i like how the earpiece thing was brushed off in like 10 seconds of the whole video as if that could rarely happen

  • @SylvieTheCuteSylveon
    @SylvieTheCuteSylveon Před rokem +13

    4:04 Ayo bout to head to my chess tournament with vibrating beads up my a-

  • @PervySage13
    @PervySage13 Před rokem +32

    I remember sacrificing my queen to get a checkmate on my dad when I was a kid. He had a knight in the way of a checkmate with my rook and I didn't need my queen for it. Well.....didn't need the queen for the final move but she was a useful sacrifice to get him to move his knight. I knew he wouldn't resist lmao.

  • @foxtrotalphaone
    @foxtrotalphaone Před 2 měsíci

    This is the best video that WIRED has put out since the PC build.

  • @robonator2945
    @robonator2945 Před rokem +1

    9:25 isn't a move like that exactly what happened in the famous Bent Larsen vs Tigran V Petrosian game? I'm not even into chess but I've heard of that as a super famous sacrifice so, unless there is something about that that I don't know about, yeah. (and yes I did have to look up their names, obviously I'm not claiming that I'm both A : not knowledgeable on chess and B : knew both of those names by heart.)

  • @ryanbahnsen6429
    @ryanbahnsen6429 Před rokem +123

    9:26
    I'm not sure that hikaru, Magnus or other chess GM can't see a queen sac leading to a forced win 5 moves ahead.

    • @d_andrews
      @d_andrews Před rokem +10

      There is no forced win unless the opponent captures the Queen. Yes it's clear that the opponent can't take the Queen immediately, but even knowing that that square is safe for now still doesn't justify leaving the Queen somewhere with so much potential danger for so little compensation, not without a lot of time on the clock.

    • @Cowtymsmiesznego
      @Cowtymsmiesznego Před rokem +28

      I sent that example to a friend who's 2200 FIDE and he found the win in 2 minutes. Terrible "proof" of cheating, in my opinion.

    • @Modie
      @Modie Před rokem +3

      @@d_andrews
      I think you are missing the main point here. Your queen was attacked. So moving it to a square where it can't be taken is what you should logically do. And if you can find a square that still attacks other pieces (in this case the knight), it even gives you tempo. The opponent can't even move the knight here, because then the rook hangs. Point is, even if your opponent spots the trap, you are winning a minor piece here. An advantage only one move away. Which shouldn't be hard to spot for higher level players.

    • @d_andrews
      @d_andrews Před rokem +2

      @@Modie you're not winning a minor piece though, because you sacrificed a Knight to get to this position. The point is that you have to have calculated all this at the time of sacrificing the Knight and been confident that it's good compensation.

    • @Modie
      @Modie Před rokem +2

      @@d_andrews
      Even if you sacrificed the knight (which was already shown in the video that it's not good to take), you win at least one pawn, your queen is out of danger, your rook has an open file AND the opponent has to deal with check (which also leads to them blocking their own rook). Kind of a better position than if you would retreat your queen. And you only need to calculate three moves ahead to see that.

  • @arthurmarcil6787
    @arthurmarcil6787 Před rokem +10

    8:02
    Well I guess I am a Bot.
    I just sacrificed The King to save a pawn.

  • @-BeeboTheRobot-
    @-BeeboTheRobot- Před rokem +8

    3:27 Or elsewhere...

  • @joseandresochoaroa4520
    @joseandresochoaroa4520 Před rokem +14

    I used to be 1900 ELO when I was younger, now probably after so many years I'm 1300-1500 but even for me, the move Ng5 was one of the best moves in the position, if night taken I could take a lot of material threatening mate, if not, the sacrifice of the queen was also one instant move I saw. I think they are better examples of how cheaters sometimes move a pawn 15 moves before they even put a espectacular move coordinated with the pawn, even +1900 can't see 15 moves ahead unless they are spectacular players and I mean almost all GM CANNOT SEE 10 COMPLEX SEQUENCES AHEAD, of course we can see easy sequences but not like that. That's a better example of cheating 'cause these ones cause a little to much fear in new players, and most of plataforms are good at taking down cheaters.

  • @ultimativePwnage
    @ultimativePwnage Před rokem +12

    4:33 this has to be the dumbest chess stockfootage ever. Look at it. LOOK AT IT. WHAT ARE THEY EVEN DOING.

  • @emperorsascharoni9577
    @emperorsascharoni9577 Před rokem +39

    Cheaters will often play the best engine move and if one move is +1 but the another move is also +1 or +0.9 (according to engine) often the engine move leads to a line that requires meticulous calculation and no mistakes to result in that +1 while the other move that might be slightly worse is way easier to see so when the enemy often plays these unexpectedly good moves where you think “how does he see this?” the enemy is either way better than you or cheating.

    • @dD-ft1td
      @dD-ft1td Před rokem +1

      The funny thing is they think it hides the fact there cheating. It’s like playing a couple bad moves then destroying them a few moves later

    • @psychoticmortacarn
      @psychoticmortacarn Před 10 měsíci +2

      We call them "opponents" my guy 😬

  • @mixedbagclips2511
    @mixedbagclips2511 Před rokem +3

    “If I had to describe the act of cheating in one sentence: the chess speaks by itself”

  • @riesenhobbit3958
    @riesenhobbit3958 Před 9 měsíci

    It seems to me that "Semi cheating" becomes more and more popular. I had a lot of players who played their opening like total beginners. In the middle game, all of a sudden, they play waaaayyyyy better than me, but only in critical situations they always seem to find the best move and when it comes to the endgame we don´t need to talk about how they kill me every time. and before anyone says anything, i am not that good. i win regularly against 1900- 2000 engines, but when i play online chess against 1600-1700 players i barely have a chance of winning. and it happens a lot

  • @ChickinSammich
    @ChickinSammich Před rokem +19

    Me, at 8:26: Hm. Queen to C1 makes the most sense to me.
    Him, at 8:30: That exact move.
    Me: Yay, I'm a human!

  • @YoxiiPlz
    @YoxiiPlz Před rokem +5

    7:08 Bro thats so true 😂

  • @ShadowStrikeGaming-xx1go
    @ShadowStrikeGaming-xx1go Před 10 měsíci +2

    Me: sees this brilliant move by sacrificing a queen
    Levy: CHEATER

  • @ASMRChess
    @ASMRChess Před rokem +24

    Great video and Levy is great as usual but that position you chose as an example was pretty poor in my opinion. The checks are pretty forcing and white has an aggressive looking position so those moves are obviously worth investigating and as soon as you see the checkmate pattern you’ll analyze it further to see if you can force it. Anyways great job and very nice to see chess getting a bit of the clout it deserves.

    • @Cowtymsmiesznego
      @Cowtymsmiesznego Před rokem

      Yeah, he made an ok point and then gave a terrible example. This kind of nonsense is why you have people accusing each other of cheating all the time online. Those moves were neither engine moves, nor hard to find for a (decently skilled) human.