The Most Insane Draw You Will Ever See 🤯

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  • čas přidán 16. 06. 2024
  • Who knew that the FIDE 50 move rule ACTUALLY comes into effect! This study is the most amazing draw that I have ever seen. Enjoy!
    This position was taken from the book "Secrets of Spectacular Chess"
    amzn.to/3w0Kpqd
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Komentáře • 277

  • @byronwatkins2565
    @byronwatkins2565 Před 2 lety +400

    That is crazy! The reason for the rule is to resolve games that are making no progress. This game WAS progressing, but a lawyer found a technicality to avoid losing like a chess player.

    • @EdMcF1
      @EdMcF1 Před 2 lety +18

      Rules are rules, (although the 50-move rule is an impure addition to the rules of the game, unlike rules about moving). Not progressing fast enough.

    • @IdeaSlug
      @IdeaSlug Před 2 lety +12

      Having found this study, I wish they would adjust the rules to 55 move limit. Of course this exact scenario will never happen in a real game, but maybe something similar that we haven't found yet?

    • @ramondewilde05
      @ramondewilde05 Před 2 lety +11

      @@IdeaSlug i would say if their is a clear progression at that point (like in this situation where clearly something happend the past 50 moves that gave someone a winning posision) the rule just shouldnt count cuzz its just dodging a loss by abusing the rule

    • @Jivvi
      @Jivvi Před 2 lety +21

      @@ramondewilde05 I've seen positions where there's a forced mate, but it's like mate in 60 or something so it's a draw.

    • @ramondewilde05
      @ramondewilde05 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Jivvi i mean ig that works still tho its kind of a sad way to draw if u were 1 play away from winning
      Like if its still an other 30 moves till u are winning it would be differend

  • @erickpoorbaugh6728
    @erickpoorbaugh6728 Před 2 lety +378

    Black: “Finally! After all of this dancing around, you can’t delay the inevitable any longer. I’m going to take your pawn and win the game, and there’s nothing you can do to stop me.”
    White: *looks at board* “Well, it’s clear neither of us has been able to make any progress here, so I guess it’s a draw.”

    • @ChessVibesOfficial
      @ChessVibesOfficial  Před 2 lety +40

      😂😂

    • @KororaPenguin
      @KororaPenguin Před 2 lety +4

      In Shatranj puzzles, one half tempo making all the difference was standard. Example at link: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shatranj#Mansubat

    • @alexanderxyz6146
      @alexanderxyz6146 Před rokem +8

      It's simply a rule. Rules make the game. And people play according to them... Similarly how not being able to move gives you a draw even though the enemy has a queen knight and bishop and you blundered all your pieces! Similar how you LOSE the game when you have all pieces, your enemy almost none, but your time got to 0:00! You'd be as shocked about those. I don't see why to be so girly about the video rather than appreciating the accomplishment and deed. It's simply been applied very rarely. Such as in the bishop+knight mate, where you need to look out for your number of turns not making a mistake in order to not reach the 50 treshhold, too. It's strategy to get the enemy into these pits, also like time management and stalling. Draw is a strategy, believe it or not, and while it might not always be perfectly calculated in advance and quite close, chess is also about making the best out of a situation, and intuition, on both sides.
      There could be other situations, where neither one wants to take a piece cause it would put him in a worse spot, so they dance around and try to slowly improve their position... perhaps after close to 50 moves one got better, but it counts as a draw when the position was that strong for both that neither would overwhelm the other one early enough to take a piece. (cause they don't want to risk to lose) Also, there are forced 60 or 80 mate patterns found by computers that you won't see in pratice, it counts as draw it's the game. (and yea extremely rare). And on a side note 50 is really really much. And there could be the rule 55 and one game would take 57 "empty" turns in theory before any piece is taken, and we would end up at the same spot.
      TBH I think the stalemate (one player can't move) rule is much more extreme than the both sides not doing any game changing moves for 50 turns! But we are so used to it, cause it's seen more often, that people are naturally cheeky about it when achieving a draw that way, even though they might have been clearly worse. (Of course, always, there are many well played stalemates of course, such as chess vibes shows some in his puzzles or other videos).
      Just to summarize the video and strength of the players:
      If you let white built up a huge threat of getting a queen himself, and you needing to dance around it (almost like queen vs queen endgame), ... while letting him having stopped your black king from taking the quick path with the pawn on b5, ... while letting him having build up that huge wall all protected preventing black to take anything and build a 2nd queen and also forming that long extra path, you weren't better than white as per no-infinite-game rule. Or rather said: Black was *not better enough* (because there is only win, draw or lose, no score). It's that simple. Draw was really very good, or how else do you describe that even strength better than with "draw"? Win-lose? No that's unfair more so you could say it would be a too on-sided score, 50 empty turns was reached. Black was not better enough . But that's why there is several games between players. In the end, this one's one legendary game, and well played by white really. (and surely on both sides). And really the threat of getting a queen was just as strong in this position with the King almost in prison. It's as beautiful as forcing underpromotions and other rules and forced draws giving these nice games or positions chess vibes presents to us so well.
      And FYI most games chess vibes presents to us, are always about that 1 single move ahead of what you need, or that one extra momentum you somehow managed to find! (here the antimomentum haha) ... that close exciting match. That's why we watch it! If this game was 53 empty turns instead of 50 we wouldn't have this video! (or, if the rule was max of 45 turns instead!!) Mind blown. 😲
      I hope you can see it from a new perspective now. Otherwise I wish you find more beauty in chess in the future. Take care.

    • @reubenmanzo2054
      @reubenmanzo2054 Před rokem +1

      @@alexanderxyz6146 This is why I think you should be technically allowed to move your king into check. Of course, if the king ever gets captured, you lose.

    • @softwarelivre2389
      @softwarelivre2389 Před rokem +3

      @@alexanderxyz6146 I don't understand your usage of the term "girly" here. Could you explain?

  • @awang_ir
    @awang_ir Před 2 lety +182

    Chess master: draw by 3 fold repetition, insufficient material, or 50 moves rule
    Me: draw by blundering my queen and rook

    • @danielleanderson6371
      @danielleanderson6371 Před 2 lety +14

      Hey a stalemate is still a mate!

    • @DM_Curtis
      @DM_Curtis Před 2 lety +4

      "We are not the same."

    • @awang_ir
      @awang_ir Před 2 lety

      @@danielleanderson6371 when masters stalemate because part of their strategy, patzer like me stalemate because of missing obvious checkmate.... LOL

    • @ChessInstructorSF
      @ChessInstructorSF Před 2 lety +2

      Yes, but ask all chess players including NM Lopez, who has started playing chess and never made a blunder? We all started by making many many blunders, the question is when will you learn enough NOT to make any blunders? Continue playing and the more you play the more you start to recognize patterns and less blunders will come naturally!

    • @danielleanderson6371
      @danielleanderson6371 Před 2 lety

      @@ChessInstructorSF You have to be bad before you can be good. I keep having to remind myself of this, because I think fear of screwing up keeps me from trying lots of new things that really don't have as much gravity as I think they do. Literally nothing bad happens if you're a chess newbie and you lose a game.

  • @joachimfrank4134
    @joachimfrank4134 Před 2 lety +89

    "Then after 49 moves, guess what ..." This shows some actions have long lasting consequences.

  • @mattc3581
    @mattc3581 Před rokem +81

    I've seen an even crazier one. The rules at some point (1970's?) stated you were in check when your king was under attack by one or two of the opponents pieces. Obviously you were not allowed to make a move that put yourself in check (as now). The puzzle construction was such that the opponent moved one piece to check your king and also revealed a second check from another piece. The solution to the puzzle was to move one of your pawns revealing a third attack on your king but delivering checkmate with your pawn on the opposing king.
    The move was legal because by revealing the third piece attacking your king you were making a move which did not leave you in check, since check was only when you were attacked by one or two pieces, not three.

    • @paulstelian97
      @paulstelian97 Před rokem +3

      With those old rules is it allowed to take the opponent king if you're not yourself in check (or to clear the check)?

    • @DrewLevitt
      @DrewLevitt Před rokem +3

      That feels absurd. For one thing, if your king is under attack by more than two pieces, your king is also under attack by "one or two pieces" - unless the rules specified "exactly one or two pieces." For another, I find it hard to believe that chess rules ever permitted a player in check to make a move that didn't escape the check. This is rules lawyering at its finest!

    • @mattc3581
      @mattc3581 Před rokem +4

      @@DrewLevitt Dems were the rules. It was a pretty contrived situation to take advantage of it, so almost certainly wouldn't ever have happened in a real game, but still needed correcting. In terms of the terminology if they had said the king is in check when under attack by one piece of the opponent then you would maybe assume that means one or more, but when they specifically said one or two pieces, it implies you aren't extrapolating to 'or more' pieces because in that case saying two was redundant.

    • @mattc3581
      @mattc3581 Před rokem +1

      @@DrewLevitt Anyway everyone knows chess puzzle setters love a bit of rules lawyering to trick the unwary. Saw another beautiful puzzle with I think king and rook vs king rook and pawn. The solution relied on the fact that even though you only have the king and rook left on the board, by convention if castling hasn't been specifically ruled out and the pieces are on the correct starting squares then you must assume neither the rook or king has been moved at any point and castling is still allowed!

    • @DrewLevitt
      @DrewLevitt Před rokem +1

      @@mattc3581 I think I saw that one too, on this channel I believe. Caught me off guard, and yeah, good stuff!

  • @goodspellr1057
    @goodspellr1057 Před 2 lety +36

    Amazing. It's worth pointing out that black can never reset the 50-move counter by capturing one of white's other pawns or pieces because they are all protected. Any capture would result in black losing their queen and the game.
    If any of white's pieces were hanging, black could try to grab it (and reset the counter) when white's king is in front of the bishop pawn.

  • @amaarquadri
    @amaarquadri Před rokem +13

    10:20 Imagine getting this in a game and your opponent actually gets a draw, while you have to look at a board where you can play Qf8# and it's your turn but there's nothing you can do about it.

  • @jaystark841
    @jaystark841 Před 2 lety +4

    Thanks for taking the time to make this. I learned a lot!

  • @kjellfredrikpettersen2311

    Some additional sidelines: Instead of Qg7 on move 50, Black could play Qe6 Kf8 Kf6 and then White claims a draw after Kg8. Or Black’s move 50 is Qd6 Ke8 Ke6, now the only move that saves White is Nc2 with the same claim. Btw Nc2 would work as an alternative move 52 in the other lines as well.

  • @nowaynotthatway3487
    @nowaynotthatway3487 Před 2 lety +14

    Yes, that's amazing. You have to look 51 moves ahead to get a draw.

    • @DaDitka
      @DaDitka Před rokem

      Sure is. I can barely see two moves ahead! Lol

  • @TheSimCaptain
    @TheSimCaptain Před rokem +5

    Using the rules to your advantage is a major part of chess. I'm impressed that white realised by sweating it out he could claim a draw, which would have been a win for black if he hadn't made a claim.
    In addition, it's also a draw if the same exact position occurs three times in a game, and that almost happened multiple times in this game. It was only the movement of the black king that stopped another reason for a draw.
    A game like this won't happen many times, so I say "suck it up".

  • @gabby_5820
    @gabby_5820 Před rokem +1

    "Call an ambulance! But not for me.."

  • @Unlikely_Hero
    @Unlikely_Hero Před rokem

    That's ridiculous! Thanks for sharing!

  • @puppergump4117
    @puppergump4117 Před rokem +1

    If this was an anime the 50 move rule would be the power of friendship

  • @jijuka78
    @jijuka78 Před 2 lety +1

    Appeciate you. How nicely you explained. Good work.

  • @Litago94
    @Litago94 Před 2 lety +4

    It's called "The Internet" from 1990

  • @jasonchiu272
    @jasonchiu272 Před rokem +1

    The pawn watching its king and enemy queen run around itself: 🗿

  • @suprabhaghonsekar6551
    @suprabhaghonsekar6551 Před 2 lety +1

    Really Loved It!!!

  • @trevorrufli3971
    @trevorrufli3971 Před 2 lety

    Fantastic, thanks so much

  • @planezero
    @planezero Před 2 lety +12

    You got a very cool mention yesterday from Daniel Negreanu at the end of an analysis video on Carlsen playing poker !

  • @LeviATallaksen
    @LeviATallaksen Před rokem +1

    Important sideline at 8:43: Black can try 45... Qd7 (instead of 45... Qe7). The point is that 46. Kg8 Kg5 47. f8Q Kg6 wins. Also 46. Kg6 Qe7 47. Kg7 Kg5 wins since black has saved time. White needs to find 46. Kf6 to threaten promotion while preventing both Qe7 and the mating attack.

  • @JM-gz1cp
    @JM-gz1cp Před 2 lety +25

    I just hope one day I can draw a game like this. This is definitely on the chess bucket list.

    • @jmj0795
      @jmj0795 Před 2 lety

      we share initials

  • @domin3k535
    @domin3k535 Před 2 lety +16

    Can you also in 52 move just move the knight, not a king?

    • @Twas-RightHere
      @Twas-RightHere Před 2 lety +11

      Yes

    • @erickpoorbaugh6728
      @erickpoorbaugh6728 Před 2 lety +4

      Then black’s pawn can immediately capture the knight, resetting the 50-move counter.

    • @isaz2425
      @isaz2425 Před 2 lety

      @@erickpoorbaugh6728 then what if white promotes his pawn to a knight instead ? that puts black's king in check, black has to take with the queen and lose the queen if he wants to prevent the 50 move rule but that would just be white's win.

    • @Twas-RightHere
      @Twas-RightHere Před 2 lety +7

      @@erickpoorbaugh6728 Doesn't matter. The game is immediately over before black can make their move. Same as with moving the king.

    • @ralkadde
      @ralkadde Před rokem

      @@Twas-RightHere This is not correct. It has to be your (!) turn when claiming a draw. Then you have the following options: claim that white and black has made that 50 moves. Or declaring you make a move like Ke8 and writing it down. (That move complete the 50 moves.) Once you moved and black makes a capture (or a mate) the chance has gone.

  • @DuhDehDeeDohDuh
    @DuhDehDeeDohDuh Před 2 lety +2

    most chess puzzles and stidies like Troitzky dont have the 50 move rule. Tablebase shows there are wins more than 200 moves without capture not pawn push. The 50 move rule was pre computer age rule.

  • @dentonyoung4314
    @dentonyoung4314 Před rokem +2

    Reminds me of the Oscar Blathy problem, White to play and mate in 257 moves.

  • @speedy_brennan
    @speedy_brennan Před 2 lety

    This is a perfect example of forcing a draw by white when they couldn't get the 3 move perpetual draw to happen because the black king moving was advancing the game.

  • @potatoheadpokemario1931
    @potatoheadpokemario1931 Před rokem +1

    9:12 you should underpromote to a knight which prevents that checkmate

  • @jeshaddin
    @jeshaddin Před 6 měsíci

    It is a win because black can sac the queen for the pawn and the knight is forced to sacrifice itself so it is a win

  • @ChessInstructorSF
    @ChessInstructorSF Před 2 lety +5

    WAIT!!! (9:28) White can claim a draw but the move has not yet been completed! In FIDE rules article 5 section 5.2 point E, states that “The game may be drawn if EACH player has made at least the last 50 consecutive moves without the movement of any pawn and without any capture…” so White has played 50 moves, Black only 49, and Black is about to make the 50th moves which will be the capture of the pawn on f7 resetting the move count back to Zero, and the games continues! White was a bit early in his declaration of a draw! Fascinating position nevertheless, and this is an illustration why you should take your time and think through each move, and calculate different outcomes. Chess is not just move the piece from this square to that square, it is a strategic and tactical game and that is where it gets its popularity and challenges. Great example! Thanks NM Lopez.

    • @chainfire9001
      @chainfire9001 Před 2 lety +6

      They both had 50 moves. White had moves #3-52, black had moves #2-51 with no capture or pawn advance.

    • @dimitriskontoleon6787
      @dimitriskontoleon6787 Před rokem

      No both had play 50 moves

  • @MarkYeung1
    @MarkYeung1 Před rokem

    If you can demonstrate to the tournament director that there is a forced win, but it takes more than 50 moves, then it is STILL A WIN.

  • @Road2Med
    @Road2Med Před 2 lety +7

    Can you put the FEN/PGN text in the description of future videos? I often like to analyse the positions after the vid :)

  • @kenspencer9895
    @kenspencer9895 Před 9 měsíci

    I would have liked to see 1. . . . Qc2 analyzed to verify whether this alternate move also draws.

  • @wixom01
    @wixom01 Před rokem

    Yea, that's a crazy one!

  • @gabrielesimionato1210

    This is really insane

  • @levistepanian5341
    @levistepanian5341 Před rokem

    Bro this is amazing

  • @chixenlegjo
    @chixenlegjo Před 2 lety +1

    On move 29, could white go in the corner for the “stalemate” trick? After 29. Kh8 Qxf7 30. Nc2 dxc2 31. Na3 Black can no longer promote (though I’m sure black still wins with their queen)

    • @ScorpioneOrzion
      @ScorpioneOrzion Před 2 lety +1

      Your pawn can move at this position, so i just move Kb2 and its a simple win

  • @baol6406
    @baol6406 Před 2 lety

    Seeing it at first glance, I can’t help but hearing Gotham words he said in Stockfish vs AlphaZero:
    “HAVE YOU EVER SEEN A QUEEN IN PRISON?”

  • @alexanderxyz6146
    @alexanderxyz6146 Před rokem +1

    Haha, so good, never seen that. It's a legendary accomplishment to escape for whole 50 turns achieving a draw. Wow. Just look at the wall, its protection and the constant threat of white to get a queen himself! I think the only time I see it coming to that myself is when I was training to checkmate with bishop and knight haha. And actually it was announced stalemate because of that rule (50) when I messed up. It's also explained here "How to Checkmate with Bishop and Knight" by chess network. Stay sharp and take care.

  • @nkk1793
    @nkk1793 Před rokem +1

    Nelson, send this game to FIDE, see if they will adjust the rules to accommodate this possibility

  • @waxberry4
    @waxberry4 Před rokem

    I believe the 50-move rule has a reason to be there. If the rule was merely in place in order to avoid stagnant games, it should be subject to qualifications just like the rule of perpetual checks.

  • @unpredictablemove8062
    @unpredictablemove8062 Před 2 lety +1

    good job......👍👍👍

  • @RuiPlayz123100
    @RuiPlayz123100 Před rokem

    When the king came over the pawn couldove became a knight and check lol

  • @ppgpp109
    @ppgpp109 Před rokem

    10:20 Pawn promotion to bishop

  • @PMA65537
    @PMA65537 Před 2 lety +12

    9:25 If the claim for a draw has to come from the player whose turn it is then white can't claim at that point. White also can't draw after the next move when the pawn is taken. (Sorry is I've misunderstood the rule from my rating about 800.)

    • @Twas-RightHere
      @Twas-RightHere Před 2 lety +6

      White simply claims the draw before playing the move, as per 9.4 at 0:42

    • @Twas-RightHere
      @Twas-RightHere Před 2 lety +2

      @Mark Kahn Sorry, in my previous comment I meant to refer to 9.3 not 9.4. “[the player] writes his move on the score sheet and declares to the arbiter his intention to make this move [which will result in the draw]”. If the move about to be played will result in a draw, the player can claim it, simple as that.

  • @Iblis2Lakon
    @Iblis2Lakon Před 2 lety +13

    You can't play 52. Kd8 on the board. You need to write down the move and claim the draw. If you make the move, opponent will immediately capture the pawn and win.

    • @Iblis2Lakon
      @Iblis2Lakon Před rokem

      @@ospero7681 Unfortunately, you are completely wrong. Opponent has no interest to claim the draw in winning position. As you can see in 9.4 a player loses right to claim when he or she touches the piece, and as you can see in 9.2 the game is drawn • "upon a correct claim" • "by the player having the move".
      So, actually white is lost at the moment the player touches the piece in the final move (even before he or she made the move) because the right to claim is lost.

    • @Iblis2Lakon
      @Iblis2Lakon Před rokem

      @@ospero7681 The point is, as it stays in the very first words: "The game is drawn, upon a correct claim". So, the player need to claim the draw correctly.

    • @ospero7681
      @ospero7681 Před rokem

      @@Iblis2Lakon No need to be a dickpiston about it, dude. Yes, I was wrong, because I misread a massively confusing rule that at first glance contradicts itself.

    • @kennethkho7165
      @kennethkho7165 Před rokem

      you can claim the draw before writing down the move, as long as the move has been made

    • @Iblis2Lakon
      @Iblis2Lakon Před rokem

      @@kennethkho7165 Wrong. If you made a move, opponent will replay and you instantly lose the right to claim the draw.

  • @osvaldo701
    @osvaldo701 Před rokem

    This is amazing!

  • @Toothache42
    @Toothache42 Před rokem

    On move 50, what would happen if ... Qe6 was played instead?

  • @aleksandrajanicka6949

    Why is the black pawn at b7 needed?

  • @Philip8888888
    @Philip8888888 Před rokem +1

    Imagine actually calculating 50 moves ahead in such a position!

    • @theuseraccountname
      @theuseraccountname Před rokem +2

      Considering the vast majority is repetition, it's not crazy.

  • @EdMcF1
    @EdMcF1 Před 2 lety

    4:18 What if 1... Qc2, 2, Nxc2, dxc2, 3. f7 cxb1=Q 4. f8= Q, Qh8+ and then we have a black Queen seeking to trade so the Black King eats white pawns?

  • @LeviATallaksen
    @LeviATallaksen Před rokem

    Should be mentioned that also 3. Kg6 (instead of 3. Kh6) would lose that one move because of 3... Qg4+.

  • @teomartini1105
    @teomartini1105 Před rokem

    Kudos

  • @danielbspinola
    @danielbspinola Před 2 lety

    Awesome!

  • @ceejay0137
    @ceejay0137 Před 11 měsíci

    I suspect a player analysing that position and working out the required sequence to draw by the 50-move rule would have lost on time!

  • @joannalewis5279
    @joannalewis5279 Před rokem

    I calculated that without seeing the initial position

  • @andy02q
    @andy02q Před rokem

    Sadly not all tournaments use the exact same rule as for how many moves lead to a draw.

  • @richardfirthucsb
    @richardfirthucsb Před rokem

    could white have moved the knight at the end?

  • @joshuahudson2170
    @joshuahudson2170 Před rokem

    I was able to find P-B7 draw only because you said there was exactly one move.

  • @TiffMcGiff
    @TiffMcGiff Před rokem

    So was this position taken from an actual game? If so, what game?

  • @cliffordgate7344
    @cliffordgate7344 Před 2 lety

    Awesome

  • @INFJ-ThaneTr
    @INFJ-ThaneTr Před rokem

    That shouldn't be considered a draw given that the pawn could have moved and black was making progress towards a forced checkmate. Seems like the rule needs amended

  • @jansupronowicz1300
    @jansupronowicz1300 Před 2 lety

    0:42 - What is the difference between rule 9.3a and 9.3b? They seem practically identical to me. Can you give an example when 9.3a would apply and 9.3b would not, or vice versa?

    • @xizor3764
      @xizor3764 Před 2 lety +2

      There is a difference if it's exactly 50th move and the opponent can push a pawn, capture or mate in the next move.

    • @W.E.
      @W.E. Před rokem +1

      Jan Supronowicz
      1 month ago
      Short answer: They are virtually the SAME!
      How this would be made use of is as follows:
      In official chess Games, there is a Chess Clock
      used by both Players. There is also a Time Control set for the Game:
      Say 40 Moves ( Minimum ) by each Player in 120 Minutes.
      ... and then 40 Moves per 60 minutes thereafter.
      So say that White has made their 120th Move, and it is
      very late into the night, and folks want to go home to sleep!
      The Tournament Director would ask Black to "SEAL" their
      120th Move, and the 2 Opponents would return say at 10 am the next day.
      Rather than returning next day, if Black can show that their next Move,
      ( i.e. The Sealed Move ) will result in 50 Moves by each Player without a
      Pawn Move or Capture, the T.D. can declare a Draw.
      Please note, it could be Move 117 or 134, the purpose of the Sealed Move
      is so that that Player can't go home and look at the position with a
      Chess Engine, and come up with a Mate in 14
      Moves which the Human Player would not have done over the board!!

    • @Trixbeat
      @Trixbeat Před rokem

      The difference is exactly in this puzzle. You are not allowed to claim a draw retroactively, so white has to call the arbiter before playing Kd8, otherwise black can play Qxf7 and now white can't claim the draw.

  • @aleemmohammed-yl4oz
    @aleemmohammed-yl4oz Před rokem

    What if white gets a knight after the king comes closer

  • @KolejowySzynszyl901
    @KolejowySzynszyl901 Před rokem

    It's not stalemate, it's pat (draw when king has nowhere to move and doesn't have any pieces to waste moves).

    • @danielyuan9862
      @danielyuan9862 Před rokem

      That's the definition of stalemate tho? And what's pat?

  • @Zach-ne9ju
    @Zach-ne9ju Před 2 lety

    Black: I am inevitable!
    White: hold my 50 moves

  • @kremenskiyjr
    @kremenskiyjr Před 2 lety +3

    at 1:10 i realised that it will be a 50-move draw

  • @Ujjayanroy
    @Ujjayanroy Před rokem

    amazing

  • @004chestnut8
    @004chestnut8 Před 2 lety +1

    THIS GAME DESERVES TO BE IN THE SEASON 2 OF NO GAME NO LIFE

    • @monke7566
      @monke7566 Před 2 lety

      ngnl is not getting a season 2

    • @004chestnut8
      @004chestnut8 Před 2 lety

      @@monke7566 hard to swallow pill

  • @yogi9631
    @yogi9631 Před rokem

    Wow just bonkers of a game 😂😂😂😂😂

  • @linuslucke3838
    @linuslucke3838 Před 2 lety +2

    Isn't it only 49.5 moves because White moved the pawn and also does the Last move so Qf8# should be possible or not? Also would White still be allowed to claim a draw while getting checkmated because of no captures and pawnmoves in 50 moves if that where to be the case?

    • @rogerkearns8094
      @rogerkearns8094 Před 2 lety

      On your final question, no. The rules are very clear: checkmate immediately ends the game.

    • @linuslucke3838
      @linuslucke3838 Před 2 lety

      @@rogerkearns8094 But 50 move also ends the game immediatly and I can't see a rule to what happens if both applies at the same time

    • @rogerkearns8094
      @rogerkearns8094 Před 2 lety

      @@linuslucke3838
      No, I've just checked rule 9.3, it doesn't say _immediately._ The draw is _claimed._

    • @linuslucke3838
      @linuslucke3838 Před 2 lety

      @@rogerkearns8094 ok but what about online chess? There it's definetly automatic. But by your answer i assume checkmate to be priotity aswell.

    • @isavenewspapers8890
      @isavenewspapers8890 Před 2 lety

      "Isn't it only 49.5 moves because White moved the pawn"
      No

  • @houssamnow
    @houssamnow Před 2 lety

    what if the 50th move come with checkmate?
    is it a win or a draw?

    • @rosiefay7283
      @rosiefay7283 Před 2 lety

      A win. Checkmate played on the board ends the game immediately, and this overrides any other considerations.

  • @Odysseus46830
    @Odysseus46830 Před rokem

    But wouldn't Black still have their turn after White's 50th move? Because in this study, White moved 50 times after the pawn move but Black only moved 49. Unless I am counting wrong.

    • @msolec2000
      @msolec2000 Před 5 měsíci

      One year later, but if you count carefully, black indeed has move 50 times after f7, the first time was on move Black-2, the second time on move Black-3, etc..., the 50th time on move Black-51. Now white moves for the 50th time after f7 on move White-52 and correctly claims a draw.

  • @user-fm3no5gm9t
    @user-fm3no5gm9t Před 9 měsíci

    😮😮😮😮😮 I am shocked!!!

  • @haolin8292
    @haolin8292 Před rokem

    10:18 although it’s still a draw, but what happens if you push the pawn and makes a knight (that was the first thing I thought about when I saw that position)

  • @Chikov2
    @Chikov2 Před rokem

    @2:59 What about Qh6 before moving the king up the board.

    • @bignoob5798
      @bignoob5798 Před rokem

      After Kg8 white is threatening to promote the pawn so you can’t move your king

  • @ciaobaby7186
    @ciaobaby7186 Před 2 lety

    Thanks!

  • @hassanalihusseini1717
    @hassanalihusseini1717 Před rokem +1

    This is why I never liked the 50 moves rule. It should be abandoned from chess.

  • @alexanderhein5188
    @alexanderhein5188 Před rokem

    But is the rule not, that there must be 50 full moves? That means white and black has to move 50 times to claim the draw? But then, black can capture the pawn in the last move and the game goes on.

    • @danielyuan9862
      @danielyuan9862 Před rokem

      No, because the last pawn move/capture was by white, so the first move that starts the counter is by black, black would have made 50 non-capture moves right before they capture the pawn, so a draw can be claimed.

  • @user-su8gc4dj5i
    @user-su8gc4dj5i Před rokem

    What if instead of a queen ,white got a knite?He could capture the black queen and maybe win

  • @lizardbyheart2817
    @lizardbyheart2817 Před 2 lety

    I thought the definition of a move was
    white + black's move. I guess not x3

  • @VibratorDefibrilator
    @VibratorDefibrilator Před 2 lety +2

    Welcome to the wonderful world of competitive chess.
    50 moves rule is designed strictly for on board games, played in tournaments, for time management reasons. Many otherwise won positions have to be drawn, but this is small sacrifice for the sake of greater good - to finish the round on time. Remember, the games are not supposed to be adjourned anymore.
    One more thing to consider here: these games are played by human beings. They are far from perfect play, their moves often are not optimal, they can spoil any position regardless of its evaluation... or the strenght of the players themselves. So, 50 moves rule is a practical compromise... and it's a time frame which can be used by the defending side like in this position here. It may seem like a cunning plan, but is quite usual as an approach. Even in my 15 years of practice as chess arbiter there are such cases. Well, I mean, it is a rare sight to see, but is considered by both sides once it's likely to occur, always.
    So, the rule of thumb is to not postpone your captures and pawn moves in order to reach 50 moves treshold as soon as possible, if you are on the defending side. As always this is general rule, one ALWAYS have to take on account the features and peculiarities of the position.
    Nice video, but I personally would tone down a bit the astonishment and exclamations.
    However, if chess never ceases to surprise us... doesn't that mean we still have a lot to learn? Yes, we all do.

    • @the8thark
      @the8thark Před 2 lety

      Let him be astonished and surprised. Even if it is just for show - for the viewers.
      Sucking all the fun out of the game is never fun. Let the excitement reign supreme.

    • @VibratorDefibrilator
      @VibratorDefibrilator Před 2 lety

      @@the8thark I totally agree, playing chess is fun, otherwise we wouldn't have spent so much time on this activity.
      Here, however, lies a paradox: over the years, fun and amazement dissipate, and the only thing that keeps our interest in the game is to pass on our knowledge to future generations ... well, we haven't seen everything, so chess continues to surprise us. , and the source of entertainment is the incompetence and ignorance of young chess players, and many situations in competitive chess, viewed through the prism of decades of experience, acquire a completely different meaning.

  • @24B791
    @24B791 Před 2 lety

    I thought i was a good new player. Turns out I can even bet advanced bots =(

  • @davidhead7725
    @davidhead7725 Před rokem

    When starting a chess game there is a move 1 (let's say e4). Move 2 doesn't come until after black finishes the move 1 (with let's say e4). Therefore the 50 move rule for a draw can only be declared after black makes his 50th move. A draw can't be declared in the middle of a move sequence.
    Just saying. Sorry nelson you declared a half move to soon so queen takes pawn and black wins. 😎😀

    • @violetasuklevska9074
      @violetasuklevska9074 Před rokem +1

      If the definition of a 'move' is the problem you could think of it in terms of plies or half-moves. After the last pawn move there were 100 plies on the board or 50 moves and the rule comes into effect.

    • @vincehomoki1612
      @vincehomoki1612 Před rokem

      Black plays e5, not e4.

  • @petesmith147
    @petesmith147 Před 2 lety

    Wouldn't Qf8 be checkmate in the second variation (technically both but for the fact that white has already claimed a draw)? Just put the queen in front of the pawn instead of taking it.
    Or am I stupid?

    • @theemathas
      @theemathas Před 2 lety +1

      White has Kc7 and claims a draw.

    • @petesmith147
      @petesmith147 Před 2 lety

      @@theemathas ah, yes. My bad. I saw black's pawn on b6 and thought it was covering c7. Forgot black was going the other way lol

  • @CarlDaneMichaelRLopez

    10:20 instead of playing 52. Kd8
    Why not white play 52. f8=N because it comes with a check and after that you can claim a draw after move 53?

    • @oenrn
      @oenrn Před rokem

      Moving a pawn resets the move counter.

    • @danielyuan9862
      @danielyuan9862 Před rokem

      You pushed a pawn, and reset the move counter.

  • @TheAngelOfDeath01
    @TheAngelOfDeath01 Před rokem

    Insane!

  • @Chaturanger
    @Chaturanger Před rokem

    Composer?

  • @SadButter
    @SadButter Před 2 lety +1

    Shit like this is the reason I believe you can only have a lifelong passion for chess if you're a total psychopath.
    Jesus christ I hate pawn endgames so much.

  • @mattt.4395
    @mattt.4395 Před 2 lety

    what about the knight?

  • @harryhutchison7083
    @harryhutchison7083 Před 2 lety

    @7:19 surely black can play queen f6 as this will force white to play king d7? This would win them the game ??

    • @dash_r_media
      @dash_r_media Před 2 lety

      ...Qf6 does not force Kd7; white has Kf8

    • @Rg-nk3rc
      @Rg-nk3rc Před 2 lety

      If Qf6, white can promote the pawn; It's protected.

    • @oenrn
      @oenrn Před 2 lety

      If Qf6 white just promotes the pawn.

  • @libertarianboy1453
    @libertarianboy1453 Před rokem

    The variation where white moves the king and therefore doesn‘t get a draw. Can‘t white just play f8 promoting to a knight with check and still get the draw with the 50 mobe rule?

  • @geisonizidio
    @geisonizidio Před 2 lety

    🤯👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽

  • @isaz2425
    @isaz2425 Před 2 lety

    can't black promote his pawn to a knight in the second variation , to put black's king in check and extend the game for 1 more move ?

    • @jagapata6073
      @jagapata6073 Před 2 lety

      That's what I am thinking.

    • @ChessVibesOfficial
      @ChessVibesOfficial  Před 2 lety +1

      I think you mean white promote to a knight? The issue is then since a pawn is moved, the 50 move rule resets and you'd have to play another 50 moves.

    • @isaz2425
      @isaz2425 Před 2 lety

      @@ChessVibesOfficial oh, thanks, I missed that part of the rule.

  • @jungermann569
    @jungermann569 Před 2 lety

    The bar of 50 moves, as long as I remember, has been raised to 75 moves decades ago. Am I right?

    • @dash_r_media
      @dash_r_media Před 2 lety

      The 75 move rules applies to certain specific endings, but I can't remember which ones.

    • @Qoko88
      @Qoko88 Před 2 lety

      Not for claiming. The 75-move and five-fold repetition rule are there to ensure a game will eventually end by automatically ending the game if it occurs. Incredible rare cases where neither player wants to concede a draw are thus forced upon. There have been specific endgame exceptions that went beyond the 50-move rule, but have since been retracted.

  • @ricksanchez-qx5zz
    @ricksanchez-qx5zz Před rokem

    I’d be so mad

  • @wesleydeng71
    @wesleydeng71 Před 2 lety

    Criminal gets away because a loophole in the law.😁

  • @EK____
    @EK____ Před rokem

    9:02 does under promotion to a knight help here?

    • @CatSurfer
      @CatSurfer Před rokem

      It's a pawn move so its not a draw

  • @dimitriskontoleon6787

    Οκ I cound 50 moves from black but only 49 moves from white the white must move but is turn from black to move. I mean was 99 ply no 100 ply.
    Ok was 100 ply and claim? Can you claim a draw when is opponent turn?

    • @danielyuan9862
      @danielyuan9862 Před rokem

      If you read the FIDE rules, you can also write down your move instead of playing it and if playing that move results in the 50-move rule, then you can claim the draw that way.

  • @patrickalpha1315
    @patrickalpha1315 Před 2 lety

    ... and wouldn't the author of this study deserve to be named?

  • @Kurgosh1
    @Kurgosh1 Před rokem

    So white can draw with perfect play as long as they can calculate 50 moves ahead.