Bobby Fischer Hated Chess

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  • čas přidán 5. 04. 2021
  • Hikaru gives his thoughts on the interview where Bobby Fischer explains why he hates chess.
    Original video put up by Dark Knight Chess: • Bobby Fischer on Paul ... titled Bobby Fischer on Paul Morphy and how opening theory destroyed chess
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Komentáře • 4,2K

  • @_GandalfTheGrey_
    @_GandalfTheGrey_ Před 2 lety +7573

    If someone memorized answers to an IQ test, they wouldn’t be testing their actual intelligence quotient. I think that’s what Fischer was getting at. He wanted raw minds playing chess at their best but natural level of creativity.

    • @Bbouy1HD
      @Bbouy1HD Před 2 lety +540

      makes a lot of sense. Natural chess was lost due to competition

    • @mariannenguyenf2433
      @mariannenguyenf2433 Před 2 lety +700

      Yes. A good analogy is the Rubix cube. All memorization. Nothing special. However giving someone a mixed up cube while you are also holding a mixed up cube and have the person match your mixed up cube in a very short time would be very impressive.

    • @bobbobbing4381
      @bobbobbing4381 Před 2 lety +26

      No, but you can memorise method and question 'types'.

    • @Hammerage1
      @Hammerage1 Před 2 lety +40

      But then there's very little room for improvement. People would be stuck at their current level, because very few people are able to improve without some sort of guidence.

    • @theflabbygentleman9292
      @theflabbygentleman9292 Před 2 lety +153

      @@mariannenguyenf2433 Solving a rubik's cube to a specified scrambled state requires no more creativity than solving it normally to the normal solved state. The method is identical, it just takes a bit longer for obvious reasons.

  • @Xavier_Dimoff
    @Xavier_Dimoff Před 3 lety +10074

    Bobby Fischer really just wanted an update for the game.

    • @dillonsaleh5660
      @dillonsaleh5660 Před 3 lety +311

      this so facts.

    • @josephanderson8977
      @josephanderson8977 Před 3 lety +256

      I agree with Bobby Fisher.

    • @dougdwa
      @dougdwa Před 3 lety +481

      He was just sad that the game for 15 movies was all the same... that people were just playing theory instead of having fun in the game.

    • @Zorro9129
      @Zorro9129 Před 3 lety +96

      I wonder how he would consider 5th Dimensional Chess.

    • @mr.benjobilly9618
      @mr.benjobilly9618 Před 3 lety +15

      Don’t we all

  • @Alkis05
    @Alkis05 Před 2 lety +2935

    Hikaru himself made a video:
    "Here is why preparing less than 30 moves ahead is not enough"
    Kinda of proving Fischer's point.

    • @michaels8386
      @michaels8386 Před rokem +52

      Very true

    • @ruxp12
      @ruxp12 Před rokem +31

      Exactly

    • @scottwarren4998
      @scottwarren4998 Před rokem +98

      Books and computers and memorization of moves made chess a dull game according to fischer.
      hikaru only talks about computers, wtf?

    • @firstlast-fr1le
      @firstlast-fr1le Před rokem +142

      @@scottwarren4998 I think Hikaru kind of missed the idea. Fischer never said nothing else had changed. he was specifically talking about chess and only chess. I do understand though that pretty much any grand master today almost has to defend chess for his or her own self. It is pretty well understood that chess has been "solved" and the road to the top is memorizing theory. Whoever can memorize the furthest into the open and middle game will be left with the preferable position going into endgame. Still need the talent and study time as games can still be lost in endgame but it sure is nice to have the advantage going into it.

    • @opfer88
      @opfer88 Před rokem

      For real? 🤣

  • @allenroygagui1681
    @allenroygagui1681 Před rokem +1722

    Other grandmaster :
    I know what happen in 10 moves
    Bobby Fischer: I know what will happen in 50 years later

  • @eugenides04
    @eugenides04 Před 3 lety +5152

    Essentially, Fischer just prefers a game that's less "solved" than Chess is now.

    • @gmooney77
      @gmooney77 Před 3 lety +823

      yeah I think he actually makes a decent point. There's a bit of mystery missing from chess when everyone knows what to do through the first 5-15 moves (depending on level)

    • @rama7731
      @rama7731 Před 3 lety +546

      Yeah, and i agree with his whole oppinion about this.. simpler example is tic tac toe, there is one theory and the game is basically dead

    • @timwcronin
      @timwcronin Před 3 lety +97

      Another way to say it might be the opening has expanded into and through the middlegame. i.e the Berlin draw

    • @Wexexx
      @Wexexx Před 3 lety +315

      Personally I agree. The tens of openings are just boring. "Oh he's playing the Kings Indian, no it's the King's Indian Rejected! Then Black can only do this or else its a loss!!!!!!!" - wow, such entertainment.

    • @srir.5282
      @srir.5282 Před 3 lety +80

      I am sad that BF didnt got to see Alpha Zero. I think Chess on the last 3 years evolved into a new-unsolved frame with all the space domination and opening breaking. Now with such a powerful tool, a move that felt bad in the past is now great.

  • @Redhawk24
    @Redhawk24 Před 3 lety +6410

    Hikaru thinking “shit, I hope that’s not me in 20 years”.

    • @chotu221
      @chotu221 Před 3 lety +812

      Hikaru doesn't have to worry, only world champions have to worry xD

    • @eliasgill2453
      @eliasgill2453 Před 3 lety +335

      @@chotu221 f***k, that's hurt man 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @Redhawk24
      @Redhawk24 Před 3 lety +83

      @@chotu221 I know right, he’s only the best blitz player of all time...

    • @parallaxlq1556
      @parallaxlq1556 Před 3 lety +49

      @@Redhawk24 ...magnus carlsen???

    • @Redhawk24
      @Redhawk24 Před 3 lety +73

      @@parallaxlq1556 in the video, Bobby and Hikaru say it’s difficult to distinguish between the ‘best’. No matter what hikaru is one of the best and I think that’s respectful to say the least.

  • @HopeP0H
    @HopeP0H Před 2 lety +2337

    I find it hilarious that Fischer called chess boring and Hikaru’s comeback was to compare chess to finance lmao

    • @vampireducks1622
      @vampireducks1622 Před rokem +187

      Good point! And yes, Hikaru's obliviousness is indeed funny.

    • @chompers11
      @chompers11 Před rokem +3

      @S N E E D money ISNT real!! Agreed

    • @scottwarren4998
      @scottwarren4998 Před rokem +222

      hikaru gets nervous when fischer says that talent comes low on the list. people will now think that hikaru isn't so smart, and hikaru fears that.
      Why does hikaru fear that? because hikaru has a big ego.

    • @chompers11
      @chompers11 Před rokem +2

      @S N E E D I swear to god I typed isnt and someone changed it i would never say money is real lmao

    • @FauxToez
      @FauxToez Před rokem +57

      I thought it was even funnier that he bitched about modern chess and Hikaru missed the point completely and said any game/sport is like that lol.

  • @patsayjack402
    @patsayjack402 Před 2 lety +1713

    There are zero problems in what he says. Hikaru is miles away on this one. The man has realized the meaningless of the game.

    • @williamkoscielniak7871
      @williamkoscielniak7871 Před rokem +82

      I don't think chess is meaningless, although it might be weirdly meaningful in proportion to the lack of knowledge one has about the game. A novice plays pure chess throughout the entire game. A grandmaster plays pure chess for a while after much rote memorization, and then at some point he returns to rote memorization. Fortunately, no human being will ever have the computational abilities to "figure out" chess, so there will always be some meaning to the game, but it certainly would be nice if something like Fischer random became a bigger thing so that more pure chess could be played among high level chess players.

    • @marianorivera3272
      @marianorivera3272 Před rokem +148

      @@williamkoscielniak7871 fisher random should be an official FIDE format. Classical random games would be amazing to watch.

    • @FauxToez
      @FauxToez Před rokem +32

      @@marianorivera3272 I would watch even the most boring Fischer Random games any day!

    • @jiaan100
      @jiaan100 Před rokem +7

      Dangerous thing to say there's zero problems with what Fischer says

    • @jiaan100
      @jiaan100 Před rokem +17

      Zero problems in what bobby Fischer said, I agree

  • @jerryblue017
    @jerryblue017 Před 2 lety +3026

    Completely correct about memorization. I remember studying a lot of books and theory during my chess contest. I got into chess for the game and creativity, and ended up studying as if it was the finals.

    • @sylvesteruchia5263
      @sylvesteruchia5263 Před 2 lety +34

      Studying is not enough tho.

    • @dark_sunset
      @dark_sunset Před 2 lety +11

      Gotta do more than that, my friend

    • @gm2407
      @gm2407 Před 2 lety +112

      Pattern recognition is huge here. Being able to see a recognised pattern and know what to do by mentally flick booking variations in your minds eye with theory knowledge makes the difference. Knowing why the pattern works in context is the key.

    • @zwigoma2
      @zwigoma2 Před 2 lety +81

      @@gm2407 So, a memory contest ?

    • @experiment0003
      @experiment0003 Před rokem +94

      @@gm2407 at the highest level where everyone pretty much got the pattern recognition thing down pat, memorization sets you apart from the rest... is what Fischer is saying. These 2700 - 2800 super-GMs already got those basics (strong positional play, end-game strategies, massive opening repertoire, mid-game tactics, etc). Ian won the candidates because he was more prepared, which equals seconds, computers, time, and memorization!

  • @williamoates8275
    @williamoates8275 Před 3 lety +2587

    Bobby Fischer looks like a mall santa who is off duty

    • @raphrblx_id5977
      @raphrblx_id5977 Před 3 lety +21

      *"I've been a good boy this mont- wait a minute you're a hobo?!?!!?? What are you doing here?"*

    • @zooarmy23
      @zooarmy23 Před 3 lety +31

      Actually he does look like the neighbor of Kevin from Home Alone

    • @armwrestlingfan6804
      @armwrestlingfan6804 Před 3 lety +11

      That's not Karl Marx?!

    • @Wtahc
      @Wtahc Před 3 lety +1

      but u play chess like a mall santa :\

    • @peterevans3310
      @peterevans3310 Před 3 lety +2

      That's what being confined in a Japanse prison gives you.

  • @martymcfly88mph35
    @martymcfly88mph35 Před rokem +300

    Fischer is completely right. Chess is so solved at a high level that most matches end in an unrewarding draw.

    • @jondoe8014
      @jondoe8014 Před 6 měsíci +16

      Or they calculate themselves into resignation....

    • @goodvibesbeats2221
      @goodvibesbeats2221 Před 5 měsíci +9

      I can imagine this is why my buddy likes playing with me. I know so fucking little about the game or strategy, that me just fucking around brings a little more fun to him than playing with human computers.

    • @doyourownresearch7297
      @doyourownresearch7297 Před 4 měsíci

      @@jondoe8014 that would make for some great tournaments.

    • @bevs9995
      @bevs9995 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Perhaps Chinese Go would take over...... Cant memorize.... And the advent of Computers would be irrelevant.

    • @estebancanizales3303
      @estebancanizales3303 Před měsícem +2

      I used to play chess now I play GO its amazing there's computers that show you strong play but it's almost impossible to memorize openings ot feels really raw its great!

  • @jamesgoldheart2857
    @jamesgoldheart2857 Před rokem +463

    Fischer on chess is like Plato on Philosophy , he was right.
    If the creativity dies , mathematics take over and everything becomes predictable and less fun

    • @anotheryoutubeaccount5259
      @anotheryoutubeaccount5259 Před rokem

      But everything naturally gravitates towards maths and statistics. Science, bich.

    • @justalpaca4943
      @justalpaca4943 Před rokem +37

      I agree, but mathematics is one of the most fascinating and creative "invention" of all time

    • @Ufhhh12
      @Ufhhh12 Před rokem +7

      Its not directly mathematics though, If it was simply pure mathematics based on "whats the probability of that move being next" it wouldnt be that boring,
      The bad thing with chess that it is very objective, in other sports you have hella random variables that AIs cant replicate as of right now like timing (just imagine the seconds/milli seconds as differences how much that is), speed, the opponent movement, list goes on forever. literally.
      Meanwhile in chess if you are moving your pieces with there being pure objectively best choices, and you can have the scenarios already played out in your head by learning through the computer.

    • @edmonddantes4705
      @edmonddantes4705 Před rokem +18

      Mathematics is raw creativity. Ask anybody who did an undergrad in math (or a PhD!) how creative you need to be. Fischer's point was about chess being based on memorisation and theory after the advent of powerful computers and deep tree search algorithms. Not sure why you are confusing that with mathematics.

    • @TheGamePlayZoneDE
      @TheGamePlayZoneDE Před rokem

      @@edmonddantes4705 how is there creativity in numbers? there are oynly facts and one correct solution

  • @countryboy9389
    @countryboy9389 Před 3 lety +3063

    Those captions are the greatest thing since puffed weed.

    • @OlJackBurton
      @OlJackBurton Před 3 lety +72

      Puffed wheat is what the man actually said...

    • @soyalguienqueestamuyaburri8396
      @soyalguienqueestamuyaburri8396 Před 3 lety +54

      @@OlJackBurton but not in the captions, and thats the point lmao

    • @ausmxkie5753
      @ausmxkie5753 Před 3 lety +17

      Maybe fischer just puffed weed right before the interview

    • @SirSoaks
      @SirSoaks Před 3 lety +15

      @@OlJackBurton puffed weed is better than puffed wheat tho 🤷‍♂️

    • @davidanderson_surrey_bc
      @davidanderson_surrey_bc Před 3 lety +10

      Frankly, I was surprised when Fischer said "puffed wheat", after searching his memory for the phrase that goes with "...the greatest thing since...". Usually the comparative is "sliced bread". But hey, puffed weed works for a lot of people too I guess.

  • @chessyoshi8626
    @chessyoshi8626 Před 3 lety +1766

    GM Kappa Blanket - greatest internet chess player ever.

    • @davidellenberger3852
      @davidellenberger3852 Před 3 lety +103

      .... in the History of cheese 6:24

    • @jonatanhelles6448
      @jonatanhelles6448 Před 3 lety +5

      @@davidellenberger3852 lmao

    • @davidanderson_surrey_bc
      @davidanderson_surrey_bc Před 3 lety +24

      Ah yes, Mr Blanket. After he retired from playing, he became a commentator. I hear he covered many games.

    • @staypositive4358
      @staypositive4358 Před 3 lety +11

      I hope a real life GM adapts that username. haha

    • @paulwhite760
      @paulwhite760 Před 3 lety

      @@davidanderson_surrey_bc... being that good he gave the competition the sheets

  • @Alex-dp2dd
    @Alex-dp2dd Před 2 lety +1507

    What's amazing about this video is that Fischer is showing how intelligent he is outside of chess. He understands the dynamics of what makes a game interesting and fun rather than focusing on optimizing already thought of paths. Fischer and people like Fischer enjoy creating new paths. Hikaru and other chess players disagree with this because maybe they simply want to optimize. They like the mass of data. They don't enjoy the stress of the unkown. Imagine a world where no games had a reddit pagr, youtube, or streamers. I think many creative types would enjoy those games far more than what games have become now.

    • @han-huo
      @han-huo Před 2 lety +67

      Exactly. I used to grind out games the moment I downloaded them with CZcams tutorials, until I realized it ruined the plot, and/or natural learning curve of the game that had been meticulously designed by the developers.

    • @FelFawn
      @FelFawn Před rokem +11

      Absolutely right. Absolutely right!

    • @kingslead8369
      @kingslead8369 Před rokem +6

      Don't worry, their's plenty enough games for those to still be around, and you still at least have the choice to do these things without internet help.

    • @newt2120
      @newt2120 Před rokem +17

      two types of gamers p: innovators vs optimizer

    • @QuartzGolem
      @QuartzGolem Před rokem

      @@kingslead8369 There is no choice involved anymore, if you are passionate about something and wish to be involved in it, you ARE using the internet in conjunction with it to connect with others who share that same passion about it. By transitive property in using the internet, you are then bombarded with all of the info related to it that you have yet to discover about it on your own. The decision is out of our hands, to not use the internet is to limit yourself, but in doing so you kill the spirit of discovery. To say it is a real choice is delusional, it's more of an ultimatum to use the help or be separated from all of your likeminded peers.

  • @pnutbutrncrackers
    @pnutbutrncrackers Před rokem +700

    While I really appreciate Hikaru reacting to what I have always felt was a profoundly interesting video of Fischer on chess, and though I like Hikaru as a person quite a bit, I was very underwhelmed with his responses to Fischer's main points. To be honest it made me think that Bobby really was on to something valid even more than I had thought before.

    • @kwazooplayingguardsman5615
      @kwazooplayingguardsman5615 Před rokem +32

      he is right in other subjects as well.

    • @pnutbutrncrackers
      @pnutbutrncrackers Před rokem +19

      @@kwazooplayingguardsman5615 Very much depends which ones.

    • @phonesgiveeveryoneadhd2826
      @phonesgiveeveryoneadhd2826 Před rokem +48

      Proff that hikaru being good at chess aka memorisation means nothing about intelligence and understanding of others. In my opinion, after learning a lot about bobby fischer and his life is that current chess players could be a lot more grateful for what he did at the time, since they wouldnt be able to play chess for a decent living if he didnt popularize it so much

    • @pnutbutrncrackers
      @pnutbutrncrackers Před rokem +27

      @@phonesgiveeveryoneadhd2826 I too have looked into Fischer's life a fair bit, and I feel that ultimately it is a very sad story. Not room to elaborate here, but his was one of the most gifted chess minds ever to have existed. No question.

    • @jestawell
      @jestawell Před rokem +5

      saying thar computers changes all games doesnt respond to Fischer whatsoever and Fischer obvi was not saying that

  • @gillespie2482
    @gillespie2482 Před 3 lety +581

    Chess is probably more enjoyable at 1600 level than a GM level since there is less memorization.

    • @kevinmartincossiolozano8540
      @kevinmartincossiolozano8540 Před 3 lety +40

      But, you wouldn't find the magical tactics, sacrifices, the long term positions where you can win. I think it's just the opposite, a GM has to memorize a lot, but gets a lot more beautiful positions to appreciate

    • @killerdoc1077
      @killerdoc1077 Před 3 lety +89

      @@kevinmartincossiolozano8540 the problem with GM level play is that the memorization never stops, while in 1600 level you can just play and play. I think a lot of positions can be appreciated by the 1600 too by intuition.

    • @arkos1179
      @arkos1179 Před 3 lety +17

      It's not memoraisation it's more like in depth analysis. Basically it's like primary school maths vs University maths. Where in university maths u have to remember alot of formulas

    • @kevinmartincossiolozano8540
      @kevinmartincossiolozano8540 Před 3 lety +45

      @@arkos1179 That's just not true. I'm a math student, I haven't remembered a single formula in years... It actually involves a lot more creativity

    • @francescof3267
      @francescof3267 Před 3 lety +13

      @@kevinmartincossiolozano8540 wait wait wait! Which country are you from ???? Maths and creativity in the same sentence????? No formulas?????????

  • @saipawankumar5297
    @saipawankumar5297 Před 2 lety +1391

    I respect Bobby Fisher even more after watching this video. I think Hikaru is missing his point. But I also think Fisher and Hikaru are at different places in life and so the way they look at things might be entirely different. Almost like difference in opinion on marriage between young and old people. Also, Fisher at the time of the interview had practically achieved everything there’s to achieve. It is obvious that the game was almost monotonous and uncreative to him

    • @ollielon5926
      @ollielon5926 Před 2 lety +225

      Hikaru is definitely missing his point. He's not even trying to understand. It's obvious Hikaru likes chess for the competitive aspect, whereas Fisher what used to be the creative aspect. But yeah, like you said, they are in different points in their life.

    • @Gingnose
      @Gingnose Před 2 lety +10

      Hikaru is trying to stand between so staying cool

    • @artsiecrafty4164
      @artsiecrafty4164 Před 2 lety +20

      He was so creative. That’s what he wanted to live for. He wanted chess to become more creative. But, you see, creativity comes from nether regions in the brain, from the nether regions in the universe. After his achievements, it would all become a BORE.

    • @lxaccaxl
      @lxaccaxl Před 2 lety +2

      Is this bobby Fischer for reals?

    • @leifalwayswins
      @leifalwayswins Před rokem +3

      @@lxaccaxl Yes.

  • @richardv.582
    @richardv.582 Před rokem +294

    What Bobby did against the Soviet chess machine can never be equalled. No one not even you or Magnus could handle that kind of pressure.

    • @gurjassinghbatra5758
      @gurjassinghbatra5758 Před rokem +62

      Certainly! Any normal human would've crumbled in that situation in the middle of the cold war.

    • @viveknamikaze761
      @viveknamikaze761 Před rokem +20

      No proof of atleast Magnus not being able to do it. He's a stone cold killer at the highest level.
      He can suck those wins out of thin air.

    • @tencizinec9583
      @tencizinec9583 Před rokem +14

      Maybe Fischer also couldn't, that's why he eventually burned out.

    • @richardv.582
      @richardv.582 Před rokem +55

      @@tencizinec9583 but , he did.

    • @richardv.582
      @richardv.582 Před rokem +19

      @@viveknamikaze761 thats my opinion Magnus is a killer but he's also depends on many outside factors...Fisher did it alone.

  • @roshankumarprasad7946
    @roshankumarprasad7946 Před 2 lety +402

    Is it just me who is infuriated by hikaru laughing and judging Fischer like that. The entire life of Fischer and his full 1.25 hour interview clearly indicates that He had been looking for the absolute truth, not like most of them narrowed to chess just for money and hollow prestige. Some donkeys consider him crazy, but Fischer was actually a highly conscious person, of next level which donkeys can't least comprehend.

    • @DrDeusExMachina
      @DrDeusExMachina Před rokem +23

      He’s not laughing at him, he’s humored by the point

    • @irishrepub84
      @irishrepub84 Před rokem +12

      no its not just you.

    • @forrestrichard8133
      @forrestrichard8133 Před rokem +57

      He’s laughing at the really bad closed captions you guys. He’s not laughing at Fischer at all in this video.

    • @noncomplacent
      @noncomplacent Před rokem +34

      @@forrestrichard8133 true but he also doesn't get what Fischer is saying at all

    • @BiHuSrcu
      @BiHuSrcu Před rokem

      Hikaru is a dirt bag for doing this, such a nerd

  • @SamudroEntertainment
    @SamudroEntertainment Před 3 lety +725

    Respectfully, I disagree with Hikaru. I think Bobby’s idea in creating Fischer Random is the right way to move forward with chess. It eliminates any need for opening theory and forces players to be creative right from the start, something that chess in its current state lacks.
    Hikaru’s argument that a lot of other fields are also harder now, while having some merit, feels a little inaccurate as a response to what Fischer is saying. Fischer isn’t saying he hates the game because it’s harder. He’s saying he hates the game because it’s become much more about memorization than creativity, which he feels is where talent in chess truly comes from.
    Personally, I find Chess960 to be so much more fun and engaging than regular chess, and that’s a big reason that I think Fischer is 100% right.

    • @smirfbroil6934
      @smirfbroil6934 Před 2 lety +57

      Never played it, but about to cause of this video lol. Chess has always felt like a good thing to improve my brain but I'm not gonna memorize openings just to compete with sweaty memory dudes. Fisherandom sounds like exactly what I want

    • @i1fabela
      @i1fabela Před 2 lety +5

      Agreed

    • @jacobr4558
      @jacobr4558 Před 2 lety +7

      Maybe HE could be more "creative" because others were unfamiliar with his preparations or theory? Maybe others were getting better so it was forcing him to play tighter and he couldn't rely on talent alone. Ultimately chess (any professional game or sport) comes down to efficiency and that means eliminated wasted moves. Maybe his competition was just getting more efficient.

    • @Nata-ch2bk
      @Nata-ch2bk Před 2 lety +24

      Agreed. I've just started with Chess 960 and find it much more fun as well. You have to be creative and think about the position right from the start, rather than play like a robot for the first 5+ moves.
      Moreover, in classic chess it's kind of discouraging, as a semi-new player, to know that, no matter how much potential/talent you have for the game in terms of intuition and creativity, you won't be able to go up in elo until you've done a ton of memorization work on opening theory, because you will be facing opponents who have been doing that work already, sometimes for decades.
      Those opponents will gain advantages (sometimes winning advantages) over you right from the 5+ first moves, just because they played the memorized perfect chess moves for that opening, and you haven't.
      Some people have tried to debunk the argument by saying that if Chess 960 becomes the main chess game, it will also start to have opening theory and will face the same issues. I think these people don't really understand what they are saying. Just think about how much opening theory and memorization work you have to do currently for just 1 single starting position. Of course you could eventually, decades from now, have the same kind of exhaustive opening theory for the 960 starting positions, but humans won't be able to memorize it as well as they do for 1 single position. That's just way too much information and Chess 960 will be about creativity and talent probably forever, unless humans evolve and their brain become like machines and/or they can live for hundreds of years (to memorize all that).
      Therefore, players of Chess 960 will have to work on the most beautiful chess qualities instead : improvisation, intuition, tactics, general strategical ideas, and end game mastery. Memorizing the first 5-10+ moves of a given opening will be a thing of the past.

    • @johnmanco845
      @johnmanco845 Před 2 lety +2

      Very well articulated, spot on analysis of the point that Fischer was trying to make.

  • @ddg3210
    @ddg3210 Před 2 lety +346

    I think Bobby was really pointing to Chess getting less fun. For many players the fun part of chess is the creativity - being in a new position and finding a winning combination. The more combinations that are discovered, discussed, and *solved*, the rarer it is to be in a genuinely new and creative position. An ounce of study replaces a pound of creativity. Bobby, a natural genius of the game, had to spend more time studying and less time being creative and having fun. The fight to become best, ruined his love of the game.
    I'd like to ask Bobby if he would like to have his mind wiped and get to learn chess all over again.

    • @tomsevcik1792
      @tomsevcik1792 Před rokem +2

      Lol Chess was the very thing that drove him insane. If I were him and got a clean slate I would not play again

    • @ddg3210
      @ddg3210 Před rokem +23

      @@tomsevcik1792 He's really not insane, just never liked celebrity and went off of professional chess. He's had a few random interviews since. Smart guy and seems very rational.

    • @crusaderman4043
      @crusaderman4043 Před rokem +2

      @@tomsevcik1792 Chicken or the Egg situation. With chess requiring a lot of creativity, it could also be that the game naturally attracts those that are eccentric and often erratic. Bobby had a tough life riddled with paranoia before he started playing chess.

    • @ivoryas1696
      @ivoryas1696 Před 4 měsíci

      @@tomsevcik1792
      Well... how would it have? What was the way it did so?

    • @sporegazm
      @sporegazm Před 27 dny

      I concur with your thoughts. And relate with them. The most amazing time in my chess life was the beginning. Learning the simple tactics and combinations and moving on to more difficult tactics and combinations. It supercharged my love for the game. I found such brilliancy and beauty in it. I couldn't believe the depth and genius of it all. Fast forward 10 years...and now I find myself endlessly studying openings for the last 2 years and stressing and hating myself for every mistake and lost game. Lol. The wins have become meaningless more often than not...while the losses and mistakes overtake me.

  • @oddjam
    @oddjam Před rokem +46

    He's not criticizing the higher skill level, but rather the means by which that higher skill level is obtained. He's not saying chess is worse because the players are better, he's saying that the necessary methods for improvement have ruined the game in his mind. So it changes nothing to point out that people are getting better at everything.

  • @user-uu3us9ys4q
    @user-uu3us9ys4q Před rokem +75

    Love this guy, he made exact point about making fun game soo boring at memorisation and not about play, and coming up with solution. I fall in love with the idea of Fisher's random chess and get this background idea, but to hear it from him is also very cool. I can see the pain on his face when he talking about all the preparation. He loved chess, he hate preparation, he try to escape but people didn't accept this idea))

  • @TheGod2go
    @TheGod2go Před 3 lety +997

    This is straight up the disney Luke skywalker

  • @freewheelburning8834
    @freewheelburning8834 Před 3 lety +297

    hes not trying to force you to believe anything hes just speaking how he feels about it

    • @nemplayer1776
      @nemplayer1776 Před 2 měsíci +1

      what i respect the most, he even made sure to say that it's only his opinion that he is the most talented ever - if he wanted to think that fair

    • @GraemeCree
      @GraemeCree Před 16 dny

      I'll take Rebuttals to Claims Nobody Made for $100, Alex.

  • @chokoon21
    @chokoon21 Před 2 lety +94

    you can't really argue with him. He had seen it all.

    • @sylvesteruchia5263
      @sylvesteruchia5263 Před 2 lety +2

      I mean Garry Kasparov doesn't hold the same opinion. And Garry is the GOAT.

    • @lukerichardson2404
      @lukerichardson2404 Před rokem +17

      @@sylvesteruchia5263 You're talking about both Fischer and Kasparov and say that Kasparov is the "GOAT"?

    • @Fantastika
      @Fantastika Před 5 měsíci

      Fischer is a nobody compared to Kasparov, lol. Who held the title for over 20 years? Kasparov, no Fischer@@lukerichardson2404

  • @ronaldbell7429
    @ronaldbell7429 Před rokem +41

    I feel for the guy. All that memorization is what turns a lot of people away from chess. It's why he invented Fisher Random. To try to restore play using your game skill and not your memory. I wonder if he'd have liked the game more or *less* in this age of Stockfish.

    • @clocked0
      @clocked0 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Less probably because at higher levels of play there's an even greater emphasis on prep and memorization than in his day.

    • @ReadingAdam
      @ReadingAdam Před 26 dny +1

      There's no fun for a new player to get noobstomped by someone who has the main lines memorized. I think that's why a lot gravitate to chess puzzles. I also notice a lot of chess streamers seem to be working off of their memory. I appreciate most when Hikaru does non-mainline openings to show how a lot of strong players don't understand chess.

    • @ronaldbell7429
      @ronaldbell7429 Před 25 dny

      @@ReadingAdam Agreed. Magnus draws a lot of complaints for being "disrespectful" because he plays unusual openings that take you out of theory. I don't see it that way at all. He's making his opponent actually play chess, challenging them to show they know why they make the moves they make.

  • @mikebliss3153
    @mikebliss3153 Před 3 lety +753

    I really lament the fact that Bobby Fischer never lived to see the legendary Double Bongcloud opening. He would have made a complete 180.

    • @moda8509
      @moda8509 Před 3 lety +66

      Bobby fischer played it 20 years ago , he maybe even invented it

    • @wewewe112200
      @wewewe112200 Před 3 lety +75

      Greatest thing since puffed weed

    • @noahschwartz1222
      @noahschwartz1222 Před 3 lety +1

      Sauce?

    • @staypositive4358
      @staypositive4358 Před 3 lety +10

      He would have came out of retirement 50 years later and reclaimed the world title. haha

    • @pegaesus562
      @pegaesus562 Před 3 lety +14

      He played it against Short about 20 years ago on ICC.

  • @TheFlanker47
    @TheFlanker47 Před 3 lety +1659

    Bobby didn´t want to be found because he was scared of the final boss of chess Anatoli Karpov.

  • @dannygjk
    @dannygjk Před 8 měsíci +8

    Fischer in his prime would have destroyed Nakamura and Nakamura knows it. That is why he is laughing like one of the bad boys in the back of the class.

  • @Srindal4657
    @Srindal4657 Před rokem +16

    As a gamer, fisher is spot on. The reason why we play games is because of the fun of chaos, not the monotomy of order. We play games "because" we do not know what to do in it, and the excitement of exploration into possibilities is what drives us. To find out if we can find our own solution.
    Even though this is what i think, i still like chess. Because its like my own test to see if i can achieve in it. The possibilities is my own success in a game i for some reason cant win at currently.

    • @fartsommelier
      @fartsommelier Před 2 měsíci

      People that play games competitively might disagree. Ask competitive players of any game how they feel about "RNG" and I think you'd be surprised. That's why the most popular competitive video games that have lasted over the years have fairly controlled competitive environments.
      Playing games for fun is great and the chaos can be fun, but people that derive joy from competition would probably prefer a more "controlled" environment. I think your touching on the idea when u said chess is "like a test to see if I can achieve it." I think that people wouldn't like to "test" themselves if their outcome is somewhat controlled by randomness..
      Also, when you introduce competition to anything, its almost inevitable that people will seek the most optimal (and sometimes boring) ways to produce better outcomes for themselves. I don't think there's any avoiding that... But, if your just playing things for fun more power to you! My assumption is that people that play at the highest level have to actively find ways to enjoy the game or ultimately suffer burn out.

  • @SilencedButNotForgotten
    @SilencedButNotForgotten Před 3 lety +835

    Bobby is completely right. Chess is all about information and theory nowadays at the highest level. Doesn't happen with all the other sports.

    • @salammaamur735
      @salammaamur735 Před 3 lety +21

      Of course he is right. This is 21st century. The opening theory should be one part of chess history of the last century..

    • @Opalivian
      @Opalivian Před 2 lety +21

      Its all pyschological. Its just personalities battling each other out given both players know equal amounts of info and theory. Its like a visual repsentation of a debate.

    • @scofozo
      @scofozo Před 2 lety +46

      even if it does happen in other sports, it's perfectly fine to hate chess for that reason

    • @xKrypto98x
      @xKrypto98x Před 2 lety +18

      analytics killed the mid-range shot in basketball

    • @visca5821
      @visca5821 Před 2 lety +21

      @@xKrypto98x Everyone still shoots it every game, nobody plays chess without computers at the highest level anymore.

  • @obi_wanshinobi
    @obi_wanshinobi Před 3 lety +1224

    “Chess doesn’t drive people mad. It keeps mad people sane.”
    -Bill Hartston

    • @M4rcLL
      @M4rcLL Před 3 lety +27

      A simple quote does not say anything.

    • @Yash-ql7vn
      @Yash-ql7vn Před 3 lety +90

      @@M4rcLL it does, you just need to read it

    • @Yash-ql7vn
      @Yash-ql7vn Před 3 lety +24

      This is true tho, I visited a mental hospital for my psychology field trip and there were 4 chess boards in the canteen.

    • @SupremeSovereign
      @SupremeSovereign Před 3 lety +13

      @@M4rcLL Think about the quote instead of simply criticizing it. It makes perfect sense and says a lot.

    • @aL3CnR
      @aL3CnR Před 3 lety

      @@Yash-ql7vn Bingo, domino etc..

  • @Thewipah7
    @Thewipah7 Před rokem +132

    This was a dig at players like you Hikaru, who base their games around memorization rather than free thinking and creativity.

    • @thatloserpig
      @thatloserpig Před rokem +12

      More every chess player now because if you don’t memorize hours of theory you lose. So not just players like Hikaru everybody.

    • @minephlip
      @minephlip Před rokem +21

      yeah like that 'perfect game' he played the other day. It all came down to him knowing an insane depth of moves by heart, like his preparation was insane. And he won because of one minor detail. I don't see how that's fun anymore. The magic is completely gone

    • @kaushy
      @kaushy Před rokem +2

      @@thatloserpig chess needs an improvement i see

    • @thatloserpig
      @thatloserpig Před rokem +2

      @@kaushy well I think what is fun about chess now is gamemodes that are shorter. Like in bullet games are never the same and way more wild that sitting at a board for an hour

    • @kaushy
      @kaushy Před rokem +1

      @@thatloserpig preferences i guess, i like longer games

  • @RennieNightcart
    @RennieNightcart Před rokem +23

    Whoa! Fischer was head and shoulders ahead of all other GMs of his time. Lest we forgot, he won the 1970 Palma de Majorca Interzonal by 3.5 pts!! and in 1971 destroyed Taimanov 6-0 !! Larsen 6-0!! and Petrosian 6.5- 2.5!!

  • @GoodKnightChess
    @GoodKnightChess Před 3 lety +957

    I knew Hikaru was gonna react to this someday, now i can rest😂

    • @BenTheSkipper
      @BenTheSkipper Před 3 lety +5

      you're famous!

    • @chessworks5124
      @chessworks5124 Před 3 lety +1

      Wanna see him react to king sacrifice for the first time since it happened in real life.

    • @deoTS1
      @deoTS1 Před 3 lety +47

      hikaru doesn't fully internalize what fischer is saying here. fischer brings up both prep and memorization as a problem in his opinion, then proposes a random starting position in order to address this. his goal is to make creativity the most important factor in chess, again.
      hikaru addresses the first problem by saying computers have opened up
      more openings, which leads to fischer's second point - memorization. these new openings only work if you've memorized all of the variations.
      fischer proposes a solution to this while hikaru doesn't even discuss it. he claims fischer is naive, while he misunderstood the fundamental point fischer was trying to make.

    • @monaipsm
      @monaipsm Před 3 lety +1

      I know right

    • @Mike-kl5yc
      @Mike-kl5yc Před 3 lety +1

      @@deoTS1 hikaru is such a fool.

  • @paulgoogol2652
    @paulgoogol2652 Před 3 lety +510

    When Bobby went to heaven God asked him for a game of chess but Bobby just yelled "is this supposed to be heaven or hell?" and then he left.

    • @offer2ferry779
      @offer2ferry779 Před 3 lety +8

      God asked me for a game of chess and I mated him in 32 moves

    • @mrao514
      @mrao514 Před 3 lety +4

      @@offer2ferry779 I analyzed the game and It showed 'mate in 32' from the the first move.😂

    • @CaptainBohnenbrot
      @CaptainBohnenbrot Před 2 lety +6

      Bobby in heaven? Well, that would be a surprise for sure.

    • @KrolKaz
      @KrolKaz Před 2 lety

      Isn't he Jewish?

    • @aesir1ases64
      @aesir1ases64 Před 2 lety

      I can totally see that happening lol

  • @onebuffalo5402
    @onebuffalo5402 Před 2 lety +31

    to a degree he has a point. Exemplified by the fact that we have names for like 1000 different openings/overall game strategies in chess. Its become less about creatively concocting moves and more about just out competing the opponent.

  • @quinnmahoney7371
    @quinnmahoney7371 Před 2 lety +27

    The Soviet’s were out to get him and had enormous resources. They put their brains together and he still came out on top. They had each top player analyze everything about him.
    He was on a crazed mission to win. Spassky could of taken advantage of his possible child like behavior. I’d say if you count relative skill and will to win you could argue he’s the best ever. The dedication was abnormal.

    • @Fantastika
      @Fantastika Před 5 měsíci +1

      Who was the champion for 20 years? Oh right not fischer. Kasparov is the greatest there ever was, Fischer isnt even in the discussion

    • @DaltonFalls
      @DaltonFalls Před 4 měsíci +2

      ​@@Fantastikacommies lost kid

    • @hristiyanhristov2480
      @hristiyanhristov2480 Před 4 měsíci

      @@DaltonFalls I hate commies as much as any other sane person, however, the Commies won big time, sorry.

  • @dmdm232323
    @dmdm232323 Před 3 lety +718

    He's basically saying that because the skill floor has risen, you get to the point where agadmator takes 18 moves to say we have a completely new game

    • @danielglidewell
      @danielglidewell Před 3 lety +32

      Really though this is more like a skill ceiling; in order to reach and possibly have a chance to break through the ceiling, to become the best in the world for a time, you need to know so much more than you did before. The skill floor for chess is essentially just being able to remember the rules (such as the way pieces are allowed to move and capture each other, you can't put yourself in check, etc.) and having some way to move the pieces.

    • @TheAecke
      @TheAecke Před 3 lety +68

      It‘s more like you don‘t need to be good at chess foremost but good at studying/memorizing cuz u can beat people before u get to play on yourself

    • @OArchivesX
      @OArchivesX Před 3 lety +39

      No. the skill floor has not risen. The memorization/theory floor has risen, and the players have gotten scared and safe to preserve their title/elo. Players like Anand and older players dominated over newer gms today because they weren't complacent and content to draw most games. Magnus is a great example. How many draws does he have?

    • @dannygjk
      @dannygjk Před 3 lety +5

      -skill- knowledge floor.

    • @mrskinszszs
      @mrskinszszs Před 3 lety +9

      @@OArchivesX correct -Ben Finegold rants about these very same things in modern chess. Everybody playing to draws, and nobody really dominates the way the older players did.

  • @flaviochuahy3440
    @flaviochuahy3440 Před 3 lety +336

    Fisher never mentioned anything about this being exclusive to chess..

    • @ExplainedIn4Minutes
      @ExplainedIn4Minutes Před 3 lety +80

      Yes..u r right he was asked about chess he answered about chess..Sometimes i think does Hikaru even listens to himself when he speaks..Most of the things Hikaru says are irrational..

    • @jacquesstoop2587
      @jacquesstoop2587 Před 3 lety +48

      Yeah that was fucking dumb from Hikaru. Also his analogy from basketball to chess made absolutely no sense. I lost respect for Hikaru in this vid.

    • @vikramkrishnan6414
      @vikramkrishnan6414 Před 3 lety +52

      @@jacquesstoop2587 And Fischer never claimed in the video to be the greatest player, he repeatedly avoids the question. He clearly pays tribute to Morphy and states that the reason he would be able to beat Morphy is due to greater theoretical knowledge, not raw talent.

    • @flaviochuahy3440
      @flaviochuahy3440 Před 3 lety +10

      @@ExplainedIn4Minutes he thinks too highly of himself to be self critical.

    • @cua7180
      @cua7180 Před 3 lety +31

      @@ExplainedIn4Minutes I think this is because Hikaru is the embodiment of what Fisher said, strong in theory n memorization

  • @tyrrian2520
    @tyrrian2520 Před 2 lety +64

    He destroyed an entire nation of chess players. Morphie crushed dilettantes. Never again will you have someone this brilliant because computers obviate individual brilliance.

    • @ivanicabratulic9297
      @ivanicabratulic9297 Před rokem +2

      Yeah, fischer was the most brilliant player

    • @Fantastika
      @Fantastika Před 5 měsíci +1

      Who was the champion for 20 years? Oh right not fischer. Kasparov is the greatest there ever was, Fischer isnt even in the discussion

    • @bevs9995
      @bevs9995 Před 3 měsíci

      I learned a new word, obviate

    • @Tuh_qh90
      @Tuh_qh90 Před měsícem +1

      ​@@Fantastika guess who was the champion for 27 years ?? Oh it's not Kasparov it's Emanuel Lasker

    • @rajitasarma239
      @rajitasarma239 Před měsícem

      ​@@Fantastika Guess who lost to a dying Tal, pff it's not Fischer. It's the greatest Garry Kasparov

  • @DeathForSk8
    @DeathForSk8 Před 11 měsíci +10

    I remember when I quit playing Starcraft 2 competitively, I felt that I reached a plateau where my skill and mechanics and creativity couldn't improve much, but I had to constantly practice openings and countering enemy openings, I had to remember tons of tiny details, exact build orders and time stamps and the learning was never-ending because the meta kept changing. I just remember realizing one day that improving at this game becomes from this point onward is more of a studying chore than a pastime entertainment.

    • @chloesmith4065
      @chloesmith4065 Před 11 dny

      Pretty much exactly the point Fischer is making. He'd have been rank #1 gm, world champion and beaten Serral and Maru and Clem and Reynor, then gotten bored and went to custom maps or came up with his own balance mod for people to try because the meta got too stale and studying / mechanical execution is the most boring part.

  • @bodega294
    @bodega294 Před 3 lety +269

    He’s right, game hasn’t been patched in over 500 years. Needs a new content update and queen is OP.

    • @unistealth697
      @unistealth697 Před 3 lety +26

      Yeah and I want a new character like an assassin or something to make the game more interesting

    • @bodega294
      @bodega294 Před 3 lety +17

      @@unistealth697 Couldn't agree more, maybe switch the board around too and add more colors

    • @mistersaur
      @mistersaur Před 3 lety +9

      @@unistealth697 It's chess not Command and Conquer

    • @salammaamur735
      @salammaamur735 Před 3 lety

      This is 21st century. The opening theory should be one part of chess history of the last century..

    • @turbofan450
      @turbofan450 Před 3 lety +7

      They buffed the queen a few hundred years ago. Definitely overdue for a nerf

  • @TheJustinHit
    @TheJustinHit Před 2 lety +423

    I mean, he's right, the first 20 moves are all book. No thinking involved, if he does this you do this.
    It's like speed running a single player game. Creativity is way below on the list of importance.

    • @hmt4173
      @hmt4173 Před 2 lety +10

      It's more complicated than that. You don't know what you're talking about

    • @interceptingfist5682
      @interceptingfist5682 Před 2 lety +93

      @@hmt4173 sounds right on the money to me, but of course you know more than Bobby 🤷🏽‍♂️

    • @hmt4173
      @hmt4173 Před 2 lety +12

      @@interceptingfist5682 ask any modern GM if they think there is no creativity or thinking involved in the opening, if it's all just memorization. It's not as simple as that.

    • @Archonsx
      @Archonsx Před 2 lety +59

      @@hmt4173 have you ever played chess bro?

    • @hmt4173
      @hmt4173 Před 2 lety +16

      @@Archonsx Ive been playing for 12 years and I am 2200 chesscom blitz. Once again, ask any GM if they think the opening is nothing but memorization. They will tell you that it is not that simple. Most openings are still rich with new and unexplored ideas. Any idiot with a computer can let an engine run for 12 hours and memorize the top engine move. But that is simply not what masters do.

  • @SaunaRogan
    @SaunaRogan Před rokem +6

    Very different level of intellects, one legend of his time and one smug youtuber.
    Fischer is exactly on point, being a hardend product of his time, making real points and all he gets in return is empty bla bla.

  • @LyTauer
    @LyTauer Před rokem +31

    Maybe it will take some decades for Hikaru to understand chess at the the next level (like Fischer is now). Some things just take time.

  • @blaisejustinejapsay8648
    @blaisejustinejapsay8648 Před 3 lety +524

    My Idol saying Puffed weed got me off guard lol

  • @somevids4187
    @somevids4187 Před 2 lety +837

    I was kind of disappointed when I first realized that high-level chess wasn't about geniuses doing insane things in their brains (which they do, but...), but more about being able to just "learn" the game to a degree that combines brain power with strategy. It took away the magic. Fischer saying this just confirms it to me... All games have been perverted with time, from being fun and full of discovery to robots taking over.

    • @PyuDeePhi
      @PyuDeePhi Před 2 lety +14

      I've never heard of a checkers engine... neither are there robot teams playing basketball or baseball... I agree with everything you say, except a supposed invasion of robots; no, I can't think of a lot of classical sports, whether mental ones (which rely more on headpower than anything) or physical ones, such as basketball, which have experienced robots overtaking the humans. That was my only critique.
      I leave what I wrote above for anyone who cares which is no one. I've been proven wrong, so now I'm editing this.

    • @somevids4187
      @somevids4187 Před 2 lety +55

      @@PyuDeePhi It was only a hyperbole regarding the players’ ability to memorize and reproduce the moves, not actual robots. Yet…

    • @oluwaseyidolapo3544
      @oluwaseyidolapo3544 Před 2 lety +66

      Ever wondered why most of today's games seemsboring and lack excitement even at the highest level? It's because everyone has memorized and understood tons of moves that makes the game played based on the best moves analyzed by the computer. Nowadays, most games are won/lost based on the first person to make a suboptimal move well known by the opponent with the help of computers

    • @entelektuel.yolculuk
      @entelektuel.yolculuk Před rokem +6

      @@PyuDeePhi first and foremost, chess is never and ever a sport. And there is nothing called mental sport. Sport is by definition physical activity. Anyways, second of all, he only did mean the chess when he said robots taking over. Ye know, Stockfish, Alpha0, Leelachess0, Dragon, Komodo, Stoofvlees etc... These engines make duels between them which do show human games as if they're children's game park. And last but not least, even if checker is a mental game, why the hell would we ever make an engine on checkers? Compared to chess (and I am not even talking about the fantastic GO), it's like a child's game. Besides, scientists and engineers and philosophers do build these brilliant, ground-breaking chess beast 4000 or sth elo engines not fer chess at all... Or not becuse they like chess one bit. They don't even care about chess. They do it fer much higher reasons: to test their thesisses about mind, cables, robotic systems, neurons etc. on these engines. And to improve the terms machibe learning and artifical intelligence. (I actually do think just like what Stephen Hawking came really closer to saying: If AI comes, it will probably be the end of the humanity).

    • @Parallelthinkers
      @Parallelthinkers Před rokem

      @@entelektuel.yolculuk It will never come the way we imagine it imo. But we can imagine it coming until the end of our lifetimes.

  • @raddastronaut
    @raddastronaut Před rokem +11

    I love Bobby. Wish he was still here.

  • @red_l6634
    @red_l6634 Před rokem +28

    Just by seeing the faces of past and present players, you will understand Fischer's point. Most of them, Fischer, Tal, Morphy, etc., looked like geniuses,some of them crazy xaxa. On the other hand, most top players nowadays look like good college students who do their homework

  • @KiraAsakura14
    @KiraAsakura14 Před 3 lety +738

    Bobby Fischer here is like the Anime Antagonist who will be brought back to the light by the Protagonist's Bong Cloud opening.
    "What.. what are you doing?"
    "I'm having fun."
    "Oh.. I haven't had fun since 1987..."

    • @yugitube77
      @yugitube77 Před 3 lety +14

      This should happen.

    • @SL-gz9gq
      @SL-gz9gq Před 3 lety +83

      @@yugitube77 Sorry man he's dead

    • @null3007
      @null3007 Před 3 lety +7

      💀

    • @deepakrajendra8019
      @deepakrajendra8019 Před 3 lety +5

      Someone should make this into a video and put it in Hikaru's subreddit

    • @libertas_americana
      @libertas_americana Před 3 lety +35

      Hikaru shows Bobby a seat. “Here, lets play.” Fischer grabs the seat and gazes at the bongcloud glory.
      Fisher finally opens his mouth, “You know the better trademark this before the Jews take credit.”

  • @DiamorphineDeath
    @DiamorphineDeath Před 3 lety +469

    You completely misunderstood his statements on computers, and took it as if he was saying “this is literally the only sport negatively affected by computers.” He made a point specific to chess, not to basketball, or football, or boxing. Those are games which can never be programmed in the way chess can, it is literally night and day to compare the physical sports, and the theoretical aspect of chess. To nitpick it as “well I disagree that chess is the only thing affected by computers” is completely missing the point. And don’t call Bobby Fischer uneducated, in general there’s such a strong emphasis on denigrating anything he said, as if you treat him like a child or an incompetent.

    • @alienrenders
      @alienrenders Před 3 lety +59

      Yeah exactly. Only by learning more openings, preparing more openings do you "get better". It's boring. It's why I stopped playing many years ago. I liked the tactics and strategy. But after I got to 1900 on the server I was playing on, I would start beating 2500 players if I knew the opening better than my opponent. And Hikaru saying that chess being built upon the past is false with computers. With computers, you don't need the past. Just look at Alpha Zero. It knew NOTHING of the past. Only the rules. And it was better than all humans and all other computer chess programs.

    • @GrubHuncher
      @GrubHuncher Před 2 lety +47

      Most people find it necessary to trash everything Fischer said because of his Anti-Semitic views. It’s almost like in their minds, if they agree with one opinion Fischer has and acknowledge that he sounds logical and rational on that topic, in some roundabout way they’re agreeing with his Jewish conspiracies.

    • @Prometheus7272
      @Prometheus7272 Před 2 lety +10

      It's not even nitpicking its just straight up strawmaning.

    • @DiamorphineDeath
      @DiamorphineDeath Před 2 lety +7

      @@GrubHuncher Fischer was ethnically Jewish, with his Mother, and his Father was apparently a Jewish doctor as well, who he did not grow up around and I don't believe has ever been proven as far as his identity. His Mother was involved in radical Bolshevik tinged politics throughout her life, instructing a young Fischer as to what to do if the police showed up at the door and began to question him on the individuals she was interacting with. Which is interesting here as he actually interacted with this world, and the Chess world itself was heavily populated by individuals with his same group.

    • @fayasamd5204
      @fayasamd5204 Před 2 lety +5

      I agree, I think fischers iq was 187. He knows what he is speaking

  • @chadsmart90
    @chadsmart90 Před rokem +62

    This is what honestly led me to never playing chess. With no Information it appears as a great battle between minds. When you realize that most of it is theory and memorized movement patterns it becomes far less impressive. That’s not to say that it doesn’t take skill because it absolutely does. However, Bobby’s point is certainly valid and I can see why most current GMs like hikaru wouldn’t agree because this is the game they grew up playing. Bobby’s take is interesting because in his era he saw the game as pure with no theory evolve into one that is solved by computers.

    • @theerrantwanderer
      @theerrantwanderer Před 10 měsíci +2

      Just because high level chess involves mostly theory and memorization should not stop you from enjoying chess though. Purposely staying at the lower levels, where all strategy goes out the window when you find yourself in uncharted waters can be fun, and there is also Chess960, which happened to be invented by Fischer himself as an update to chess. This is coming from someone who had only a marginal interest in chess up until a year ago

    • @mono1813
      @mono1813 Před 6 měsíci

      You have played and have realised how terrible you are at the game. Everything else is just excuses and rationalisation. Your 800 level opponent isn't gonna play ruy lopez theory until move 25. I'm 2100 and people still barely play 10-12 moves of theory. Git gud.

  • @reidpattis3127
    @reidpattis3127 Před 2 lety +25

    I disagree with the other sports analogy. Let’s take tennis for example. No matter how much you attempt to memorize your opponent’s movements, every single serve is different. Every set is different. Memorization maybe constitutes at most 20% of the game.

    • @valley-girl
      @valley-girl Před 11 měsíci

      I love tennis but if there's a game and a format that tests all types talents, its cricket 🏏 All three formats test a different type of skill. The players are doing different jobs on the same field. The captain is the closest to a chess players I'd say.

    • @eap1234
      @eap1234 Před 5 měsíci

      I think the point is that with most sports they players of today on average are better or more refined than sports players of the past…on average

    • @helo98736Hah
      @helo98736Hah Před 4 měsíci

      ​@valley-girl nobody plays cricket just the subcontinent and some commonwealth

  • @cidmatrix9643
    @cidmatrix9643 Před 3 lety +535

    The game with two kings proposed by Capa sounds fun

  • @thom1218
    @thom1218 Před 3 lety +279

    Massive disrespect to Fischer there - he never said "computers ONLY made a difference to chess", 3-braincell humor aside on the closed caption, he was pretty clear that memorizing theory made chess a memorization contest rather than one of creativity.

    • @nadan2533
      @nadan2533 Před 3 lety +1

      🙄

    • @rahulkhatwani548
      @rahulkhatwani548 Před 3 lety +2

      So why massive disrespect to him? I mean chess theory DOES make it more of a memorization game

    • @lea4777
      @lea4777 Před 3 lety +12

      You said exactly what I was thinking. Including the 3 braincell humour joke

    • @veechimo
      @veechimo Před 2 lety +34

      Agreed. Hikaru also claims bobby fischer was the 'hardest working', when in one of Fischer's interviews on the Dick Cavette show, Fischer in his own words describes the other top players as "not very talented, they just work like dogs". There are other interviews where Fischer debunks claims that he has memorized thousands of games etc - his response was something like "It's wrong. Maybe I haven't even memorized one game". And I've seen evidence of this - most good chess players know the Morphy vs Duke game in Phildor's defense, and when Fischer commentated it in Yugoslavia, he had to look at a book for the moves. All in all - i don't agree that fischer was the hardest working, nor was he crazy. His talent and creativity is what made him the best, not his 'hard work' like the media always portrays (to make him seem bat shit crazy).

    • @isaacjacob3590
      @isaacjacob3590 Před 2 lety +17

      @@veechimo Exactly. And it's even disrespectful to the russians. Like, it was Fischer alone vs an entire team of russian players helping each other. How the hell would Fischer have worked MORE than an entire team together?? Hikaru basically called the russian team lazy fucks that way. Obviously Fischer overcame a whole team of pro players because he was more talented than all of them together.

  • @shayblades6007
    @shayblades6007 Před rokem +17

    No other game is or has been affected so much by computers (for the worse) Bobby is absolutely 💯

    • @Fantastika
      @Fantastika Před 5 měsíci

      Kasparov disagrees.

    • @shayblades6007
      @shayblades6007 Před 5 měsíci +4

      @@Fantastika Then Kasparov is wrong & it won't be the first time!

    • @Fantastika
      @Fantastika Před 5 měsíci

      @@shayblades6007 kasparov is the greatest chess player of all time, Fischer is a nobody compared to him

    • @shayblades6007
      @shayblades6007 Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@Fantastika @Fantastika Off topic, back in your box assw/pe.

    • @Fantastika
      @Fantastika Před 5 měsíci

      oh someones mad because their favourite second rate chess player was insulted @@shayblades6007

  • @therealbs2000
    @therealbs2000 Před rokem +7

    "The greatest thing since puffed weed" - bobby fischer
    Of all the creative lines fischer played, that one was the most unexpected

    • @Noah-1999
      @Noah-1999 Před 6 měsíci

      Google "puffed wheat"

  • @vladavasiljev
    @vladavasiljev Před 3 lety +151

    Keep in mind that Fisher's rating in 1972. was 2785. the first who catched him is Kasparov, after 20 years. Today, after 50 years and 25 years of super computers, only a dozen super GMs have that rating or little higher. Nobody ever in chess history was such dominant against his contemporaries like Fisher and Morphy were. But he's the perfect example of Morphy's quote that the ability to play chess well is the sign of a gentleman and the ability to play chess well is the sign of a wasted life...

    • @watermelonlalala
      @watermelonlalala Před 2 lety +3

      What did he do with his life after he stopped playing chess?

    • @adbirdk
      @adbirdk Před 2 lety +16

      " Morphy's quote that the ability to play chess well is the sign of a gentleman and the ability to play chess well is the sign of a wasted life...
      " 🤔

    • @greenpony2817
      @greenpony2817 Před 2 lety +18

      Elo shows how good you are compared to other players around. 2800 in 60s and 2800 in 2020s is not the same, because an average level increased significantly. It's just no comparison.

    • @danielwanger5919
      @danielwanger5919 Před 2 lety +5

      @@adbirdk the first "well" has to be emitted

    • @baronroaster404
      @baronroaster404 Před 2 lety +5

      @@danielwanger5919 omitted

  • @Levipaulsen
    @Levipaulsen Před 3 lety +159

    "Are you a gamer?"
    "Not really, but I don't mind a few rounds of For Sure Random"

  • @0Caracalla
    @0Caracalla Před rokem +18

    Fischer was 100% correct, the guy is one of the greats I think he knows what he’s talking about.
    While it’s true any game or sport eventually becomes more and more refined, optimized, and there becomes a new meta- he’s correct in saying that at a certain point the game becomes sort of repetitive and you need to update the rules to offset the monotony.

  • @jerryanstey7058
    @jerryanstey7058 Před 2 lety +1

    nice to see the close captions clearing up the conservation for us !!!!

  • @user-te9vx8bx8y
    @user-te9vx8bx8y Před 3 lety +391

    Is it just me or does Fischer sound more logical than Hikaru?
    "chess is too much memorization" --> "yeah but sports evolved as well", I just don't really get it

    • @Damphouse
      @Damphouse Před 3 lety +85

      yeah I don't think Hikaru was really following Fischer's point at all

    • @lolad1257
      @lolad1257 Před 3 lety +30

      I think he means that sports in general have evolved to the point that prep & science/computers and just generally things other than raw talent have become more important. In chess it's engines, but in physical sports it can be team strategies and tactics, athletic wear, sports medicine & therapy with cryo chambers and stuff, straight up doping, etc.

    • @rafajero-8904
      @rafajero-8904 Před 3 lety +42

      Exactly my thoughts. It's like Hikaru didn't give it enough thought. The point is that memorization is **dull**. See, Hikaru acts like Fischer is complaining about how competitive high level chess is right now. And that's not the point at all !

    • @mwtjay
      @mwtjay Před 3 lety +27

      Hikaru’s IQ is like 102. Not much can be expected of him regarding his capacity to make arguments. People of course are gonna say Hikarus right because people are dumb and followers but impartially there is Fischer’s points were better and constructed better

    • @valdemar621
      @valdemar621 Před 3 lety +13

      @@mwtjay Hikarus iq is higher wtf - good luck calculating the stuff he does in seconds with a 102 iq

  • @chirag5102
    @chirag5102 Před 3 lety +164

    Hikaru is laughing and all but he knows Bobby is right about memorization, pre arrangements and computers/ people working for you.
    He says it's true for all the games, idk how, but he cant deny that with chess

    • @ExplainedIn4Minutes
      @ExplainedIn4Minutes Před 3 lety +33

      Yes you r right..Hikaru laughed bcs he wanted to avoid listening to the truth..
      Chess960 offers more creativity..

    • @zada4a
      @zada4a Před 3 lety

      Yep

    • @nightside9443
      @nightside9443 Před 3 lety +5

      @@ExplainedIn4Minutes oh you think?
      Yes for top-level chess that's true, but for anyone below 2000 rating you don't need a lot of opening theory

    • @gqinfinity3847
      @gqinfinity3847 Před 2 lety +2

      Plus you can't compare physical sports with chess. Skill and creativity are different when competing.

  • @ThankYouESM
    @ThankYouESM Před 2 lety +4

    Around the year 1985, a friend of mine introduced me to a far more fun version called Replacement Chess whereas the taken pieces have to get immediately put back on the board by the opponent as a single move... and that if the pawn reaches the opposite end is also a win.

  • @daspooperidunncurr8379
    @daspooperidunncurr8379 Před rokem +7

    Fischer: fuck chess
    Hikaru: ***copes fucking haaaaaaard***

  • @RS-np2bk
    @RS-np2bk Před 2 lety +85

    This was not one of Hikaru's best videos. He was not really taking Fisher seriously. He never addressed the fact that Fischer won 20 consecutive games including 13 straight in the Candidates Match's against some of the strongest players in the world. No one has ever done anything remotely like that. For at least two years Fischer was the greatest player of the 20th century if not the all time greatest.

    • @chandie5298
      @chandie5298 Před rokem +10

      There is nobody today who has equaled Fischer's verifiable historical fact. Not a single one of them today is Fischer's equal.

    • @bevs9995
      @bevs9995 Před 2 měsíci

      I thought his winning streak was like 6+ years.

    • @RS-np2bk
      @RS-np2bk Před 2 měsíci

      The point I was making is that other great players have streaks where they never lose a game--like the 125 game streak of Magnus--but Fischer's streak was winning 20 consecutive games against the top players in the world. No draws. No losses.

    • @bevs9995
      @bevs9995 Před 2 měsíci

      @@RS-np2bk Magnus longest winning streak was two years.
      Fischers was 6+ years
      Fischer was also 200 points above any of his competitors and had much tougher competition; Magnus can memorize but when that advantage gets taken away, he loses to Wesley

    • @RS-np2bk
      @RS-np2bk Před 2 měsíci

      You are confusing "not losing" with "winning." Fischer did not have a 6 year win every game streak. @@bevs9995

  • @niki8280
    @niki8280 Před 3 lety +102

    I learned two things in this video.
    1. Bobby Fisher is awesome ( I probably agree with him more than I do Hikaru)
    2. Closed Captions are the beat thing since puffed weed.

    • @gordonramsdale
      @gordonramsdale Před 3 lety +28

      Hikaru doesnt want to agree because that would admit he isnt as good as his audience thinks as much of it is memorisation

    • @markkealy4417
      @markkealy4417 Před 3 lety +5

      @@gordonramsdale I think he acknowledges that, its not that he's not good and he's just memorised the most popular moves, its that chess at his level is mostly about memorisation and he does that better than nearly anyone else

    • @markkealy4417
      @markkealy4417 Před 3 lety +19

      Fisher definitely had some crazy moments, but he's making a good argument here

    • @gavinwhitehouse2377
      @gavinwhitehouse2377 Před 3 lety +3

      I mean Fischer was a racist, sexist, anti-Semitic, raging lunatic, but if you like him because he thought chess was too solved after being around for over a thousand years then go ahead lol.

    • @DiamorphineDeath
      @DiamorphineDeath Před 3 lety +3

      Tyson will go down as potentially the greatest fighter in the history of the heavyweight division; he went to jail for rape, was accused of spousal abuse, assault, violent outbursts outside the ring, etc. Yet we can disassociate his personal life for his sporting life. I would not call Tyson a raging lunatic, in the same way I would not call Fischer one. Eccentric? Sure. A lunatic? No.

  • @erandeser5830
    @erandeser5830 Před 2 lety +11

    Fisher has a point even more today.

  • @chokoon21
    @chokoon21 Před 2 lety +4

    a wild Leonardo Davinci appears

  • @ravekid23
    @ravekid23 Před 2 lety +79

    He didn't hate chess. He hated what became of chess. It's the same feeling I have for fighting games now. All the joy has been sucked out of it. In terms of chess, at the highest level, it's not 1 on 1 anymore. In his time, it was his team of analysts versus the other team of analysts, looking for holes/weaknesses to exploit in his opponent's game, so he could memorize them. Now it's team of machine learning programmers, versus other team of machine learning programmers doing the same thing. It takes something beautiful and corrupts it, institutionalizes it. Imagine how different chess would be now, if everyone had to play in tournaments via computer and you have no idea who you're opponent is. The entire focus would switch from memorizing weaknesses to creativity and adaption, because you have no idea what to expect.

    • @nicolasleonnarino3159
      @nicolasleonnarino3159 Před rokem +4

      In fact, you can play on Lichess in Zen mode, which hides information about your opponent.

    • @jungshin87
      @jungshin87 Před rokem +3

      This is what happened to smash melee and why melee is not as hype anymore. There's not much more "discovery".

    • @williamkoscielniak7871
      @williamkoscielniak7871 Před rokem

      'It takes something beautiful and corrupts it, institutionalizes it". That's what the left hemisphere of the brain does when it is allowed to run amok. The computational aspect of the brain/mind overtakes the creative, imaginative, intelligent, embodied aspect of the brain/mind until all that is left is a deadened, memorized re-presentation of what was once alive, fresh, and novel.

    • @suned3128
      @suned3128 Před rokem +1

      @@jungshin87
      Nah, I still think melee’s hype

    • @domestinger8805
      @domestinger8805 Před rokem

      It's how I feel about women

  • @jvillzy
    @jvillzy Před 3 lety +86

    They need to add an update like a catapult on each players side of the board, and once you checkmate your opponent you have to flick a little ball at the King to try and knock it over. Only then can you win

  • @stargazer2042
    @stargazer2042 Před rokem +15

    The interviews I've seen show that Fisher was not crazy. He sounds fully sane, intelligent, and wanting to improve chess. I'm now upset he was so defamed. He also is very humble by not claiming to be the best.

    • @Empobaer
      @Empobaer Před rokem +1

      Did you hear the interview he gave on the 11th September? Celebrating it and literally called for the killing of Jews, even though being one himself by ethnicity. He does not sound sain there.

    • @macleantimmons5658
      @macleantimmons5658 Před rokem

      @@Empobaer If you're calling him insane based on that, you're not using the word insane correctly.
      Also, I'm not justifying killing civilians in any scenario, but I think America is arguably the most evil country in the world. There is plenty of reason for people to want the American empire to fall. The American oligarchy has kept Africa, SE Asia and Central + South America at the bottom of the global economy for their own benefit. Corporations like Coca Cola and Exxon are actively and knowingly contributing to an inevitable mass extinction event by polluting the Earth with synthetic polymers. Our government constantly pushes out propaganda, and looks for ways to manipulate and distract the masses from the gradual collapse of our capitalist empire. If you don't believe me, just wait. Or do some research. Ted Kaczynski was our best chance at escaping this downward spiral, and nobody listened to him because the oligarchy-controlled mass media labeled him as insane.

    • @tubeguy4066
      @tubeguy4066 Před rokem +1

      @@Empobaer you made that up

    • @Empobaer
      @Empobaer Před rokem +1

      @@tubeguy4066 if you are interested, I can search for the.interview again, if not I will not bother to do so

    • @adolfhipsteryolocaust3443
      @adolfhipsteryolocaust3443 Před rokem

      Crazy is codeword for antisemite, he simply hated jewish (which is a totally rational opinion to have) that's why they called him crazy

  • @MicahHeard
    @MicahHeard Před rokem +7

    I bet Hikaru wouldn't be laughing with a prime, studied, and prepared Fischer in front of him. The Fischer Fever would kick in. Would be no excuses.

  • @himanshusolanki421
    @himanshusolanki421 Před 3 lety +140

    When you play a game there is no competition between players but competition between their preperation- Anish Giri

    • @cesartheskinwalker
      @cesartheskinwalker Před 3 lety +32

      True, that why bobby hated chess

    • @arkos1179
      @arkos1179 Před 3 lety +1

      That's pretty stupid, magnus is probably the least prepared , but still dominated the rest

    • @moda8509
      @moda8509 Před 3 lety +23

      Magnus is the least prepared , how do you know that ?

    • @antichrist.superstar
      @antichrist.superstar Před 3 lety +34

      @@arkos1179 Magnus has a team of 6-10 GMs and super GMs, as well as several coaches, to help him prepare for big tournaments. All players in the top 10 are probably equally prepared.

    • @desaifamily8239
      @desaifamily8239 Před 3 lety +4

      @@antichrist.superstar the statement about the prep was wrong but magnus is by far the best outside of theory, and is very creative

  •  Před 3 lety +156

    Let me tell you something..., i love chess BUT, i hate the fact that someone can just learn 30 moves for a specific opening and just go and repeat what they have previously memorized and that's all. I belive that kills the game and in some way is more enjoyable not to know SO MUCH and just improvise over new things every game, in my opinion that's more fun, and i thing Fischer is just right in some point ¿where is creativity?

    • @gordonramsdale
      @gordonramsdale Před 3 lety +30

      I think Fischer said more actual chess goes on in the sub 1000 level of chess than master games because every move is their own

    •  Před 3 lety +20

      @@gordonramsdale But..., lets be honest, all this romantic style players are icons because they invented in the middle of a game a non book move, and that's why people love them and learn from them. I have studied some actual players games and they are all books theory and i have studied Fischers games and most of it is just pure genius, and i think he noticed that and suddenly hated the root chess was taking. That's what i catch from his words.

    • @gordonramsdale
      @gordonramsdale Před 3 lety +17

      @@limemlohdnul4795 That's the entire point, they don't know any theory so they are playing chess not just memorisation

    • @ameykadam5195
      @ameykadam5195 Před 3 lety +7

      agree a good example is stafford gambit you just watch someone play it and you dont deserve to win if the opponent isnt aware about it

    • @jakefromstatefarm6969
      @jakefromstatefarm6969 Před 3 lety +4

      I'm the exact opposite of you. Theres this amazing massive world of knowledge in opening theory and I'm just fascinated by all of it that I want to know. At the top level its exhaustingly tedious and most people hate that, which is why we have variants like 960 or bullet, but I think I'm weird because I find the world of opening theory to be just as enjoyable as the creative tactics of the rest of the game.
      However I totally see Fischer's point in that high level classical chess has shifted toward valuing memorization and preparation over creative and skillful play, and understand how that could sour your feelings about chess in general.

  • @MrShoe321
    @MrShoe321 Před rokem +6

    Damn, this is someone that really understands what it means to be good at something

  • @anbuselvan4399
    @anbuselvan4399 Před rokem +8

    The point he misses is that sports/games improve over time but not to a point where the first half of the sport is pre-played and the audience have to hope to get a fresh game in second half.
    And it also demotivates new players to learn the game.

  • @SpiritualFilip
    @SpiritualFilip Před 3 lety +116

    To be honest, there's lines where you can literally force a draw. It's basically a fact that it's becoming more and more memorization rather than creative thinking.
    Chess is a game, finance isn't. Other games are not depending on maths so computers can't rule them.

    • @Spazticspaz
      @Spazticspaz Před 3 lety +15

      They used one of these self teaching AIs on the MOBA DOTA and they rolled the human pro team. Computers rule all.

    • @user-kl8vj2qy9w
      @user-kl8vj2qy9w Před 3 lety +12

      Exactly. It's one of the very few times I strongly disagreed with hikaru

    • @alexnaturalis1179
      @alexnaturalis1179 Před 3 lety +18

      It's early to claim that computers can't widely become dominant. They have continually surprised us by dominating games like jeopardy, poker and Dota. Will technology bore us to death by leveling the competitive field? I don't know but It looks like it's heading that way.

    • @hamyzschidenfeld3215
      @hamyzschidenfeld3215 Před 3 lety

      @@alexnaturalis1179 Ever heard of singleplayer games? Or cooperative games? Not everything is competetive, and you can have competetive of humans vs humans without bots.

    • @TheHeicPy
      @TheHeicPy Před 3 lety +7

      @@Spazticspaz Thats not a good comparison, the fact that it was based on fixed rules with limited amount of heroes and limited things to do on the map, and the AI played thousands upon thousands games against himself, obviously pro players gonna lose, its very different game, you could say is the same as you would play chess with only 2rooks and 2knights, and some pawns, ofcourse you would do bad, because you never played with such rules, but AI played it thousands upon thousands, if you would let pro team play it 50games, they would crush the dota OpenAI. it was the same with OpenAI Shadow fiend 1x1 mid, the AI kept destroying pro players for the first few weeks, and then the players learned and destroyed the Bot everytime afterwards so yeah games are not depending on maths so computers cant rule them i agree with it.

  • @Hersheyquest
    @Hersheyquest Před 3 lety +87

    I might be wrong but I think he was more tired of classical chess.

    • @mikecrapse5285
      @mikecrapse5285 Před 3 lety +1

      Which even hikaru and many other top GMs are too,

    • @billw.5030
      @billw.5030 Před 3 lety +4

      Maybe that’s why Fischer invented FRC

  • @jaikumarjadhav6575
    @jaikumarjadhav6575 Před 9 měsíci +6

    Imagine a game where both players play exactly based on some moves from computer and no imagination at all. We'll have some long games instead of exciting, unpredictable moves. Like Bobby Fischer's Be6 move in the game of the century. In that game, the move made no sense at all. But looking back, it's probably the move of the century. He did that without computers and help. Just instinctively reacting to newly developing situation.

  • @WhatAMagician
    @WhatAMagician Před rokem +9

    Morphy and Fisher were the best minds to ever play chess and they both mastered then rejected the game.

    • @chandie5298
      @chandie5298 Před rokem +3

      they both transcended chess....... there is no current GM who has even come close intellectually

    • @Fantastika
      @Fantastika Před 5 měsíci

      no they arent, not even close. Kasparov, Karpov and Carlsen are much much better.

    • @Fantastika
      @Fantastika Před 5 měsíci

      this is so wrong its funny@@chandie5298

    • @Tuh_qh90
      @Tuh_qh90 Před měsícem

      You have to stop thinking one dimensionally to understand this

  • @vespeneprotoss4346
    @vespeneprotoss4346 Před 3 lety +80

    Fischer taught himself chess to the world-champion level and used his own self-taught chess to beat the Soviet chess machine. That in itself makes him the greatest of all time.

    • @nehuenbec
      @nehuenbec Před 3 lety +3

      agree

    • @knifetoseeya
      @knifetoseeya Před 3 lety +14

      @Neal DoubleAA he did beat him. Carlsen drew one game and lost all other games.

    • @user-zb8tq5pr4x
      @user-zb8tq5pr4x Před 3 lety +4

      What do you mean self-taught?? Thats the dumbest shit ever. Fischer literally learned russian just so that he could learn from the russian legends before him. He read book after book. He was amazing, but definitely not self-taught.

    • @lukebruce5234
      @lukebruce5234 Před 3 lety

      @Neal DoubleAA yeah I doubt he spoke the language though, probably just the very basic chess vocabulary

    • @willieduggan3201
      @willieduggan3201 Před 3 lety +2

      It's certainly a compelling case for BF being the G.O.A.T. My own view is that he is the greatest, but that's just my view. Bobby's respect for Morphy was always evident. In many interviews through the years Morphy was Bobby's reference point.

  • @christianwatts2874
    @christianwatts2874 Před 3 lety +96

    Bobby Fischer reacts to 5D Chess with Multiverse Time Travel.

  • @tristan7720
    @tristan7720 Před rokem +6

    I thought he went crazy or something, but he seems like a very reasonable old man with a super good point.
    Look at the championships, it's mostly about theory now, that's nothing interesting.

  • @jniemec
    @jniemec Před 2 lety +66

    It doesn’t take much to make Hikaru laugh uncontrollably

  • @bard4055
    @bard4055 Před 3 lety +36

    "Classical chess is dead" -Hikaru, yet he loves to be the contrarian to Bobby whenever he can. "Every sport is getting harder", find me a sport that changed as much as chess because of computers. You can't. Bad, shallow-minded take from Hikaru.

    • @jakefromstatefarm6969
      @jakefromstatefarm6969 Před 3 lety +4

      Baseball?

    • @shaunwilletts9288
      @shaunwilletts9288 Před 2 lety +1

      VAR in football

    • @steveleopold6476
      @steveleopold6476 Před 2 lety +3

      @@shaunwilletts9288 computers take away the beauty of chess while VAR actually increases it in football

    • @jimmorrison9287
      @jimmorrison9287 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jakefromstatefarm6969 I agree baseball has ruined baseball to a degree.

    • @MMAengineer
      @MMAengineer Před 2 lety +1

      well hikaru apparently took an iq test and it was only 102..

  • @Cudlles
    @Cudlles Před 3 lety +61

    I agree with most of what Bobby has said. I got to 2150 elo without ever openingen a chess book. My games used to be minefields from move 5. Action was guaranteed and the position was always interesting. Gaining more and more elo meant facing better players who memorized openings and this in turn forced my games to be more standard and often times just flat out boring.
    I stopped playing chess for the same reasons why Bobby hated it. You can be the most creative mind out there but if your opponents do a lot of deep prep they can suck the fun right out of it.
    I for one find it definetly not fun to play 22 moves of opening prep followed by a dull, dry, played-out position which has a >70% chance of being a draw.

    • @Elrog3
      @Elrog3 Před 2 lety +3

      Call it talent, intuition, or whatever. Just not creativity. Creativity is not a part of chess or anything that is competitive for that matter.

    • @esotericman22
      @esotericman22 Před rokem +10

      I'm the same. Reached about 2100 and got totally fed up with the theory side. Now I have a simple app on my phone which I play around 6 or so games a day. I mix up the opening really quickly with quirky moves. I win probably 8 out of 10 games I play but every single game is explosive. This way I'm enjoying chess again

    • @JerryReyes
      @JerryReyes Před rokem

      What is your opinion on Go?

    • @Cudlles
      @Cudlles Před rokem

      @@JerryReyes I only played it 1 evening against a mate who has 2000 elo. It was a lot of fun. There are some patterns you need to learn, but thats the same in chess. Other than that I think you need a lot less theory for GO which makes it more appealing to a lot more people. The game is also a lot more complex than you would expect. If you compare it to chess, you only have 1 type of piece which would suggest that it would be a lot easier but the complexity and levels of calculation are a lot deeper than I initially thought. It is more straightforward as well, I think that once you get a hold of the basics it should be all about how deep you can think whilst in chess that is not the only factor.
      But as I said, I only played it for 1 evening so I might be missing a lot of subtle nuances the game still has :)

  • @TomJones-tx7pb
    @TomJones-tx7pb Před 2 lety +13

    This is priceless. The thing I like about Naka's play is that it is not cold calculation. Unfortunately that leaves him vulnerable to Magnus. Also, I think that is what Bobby is talking about. The captions and Naka's reactions to them are very entertaining..

  • @wdiddy1
    @wdiddy1 Před 2 lety +7

    I agree with Fisher, I have come to enjoy chess and play almost everyday but I've realized that it is mostly memorization and recall. If you can remember every counter move then you can draw against Magnus in classical chess. This is why I only play timed chess and I think chess is more fun when you aren't that great yet as the moves are unpredictable lol and I am not very good. Bobby is right to say the game needs to have some kind of change to survive because if he realized it years ago and I've realized it myself then there has to be more people who realize this. The best chess player now probably has the best memory and we've all seen Magnus memorize multiple boards blindfolded and also recall games from other players just from seeing the board layout. There is not much creativity any longer as every best move has been shown. Morphy and other guys from way before computers were geniuses and had to make up their own moves.

  • @j.cdenton2403
    @j.cdenton2403 Před 3 lety +41

    Rest in peace Mr. Fischer.
    I always tear up when I see videos of him or hear him speak. He speaks more truth than anyone is willing to accept.

    • @unslaadkrosis3489
      @unslaadkrosis3489 Před 2 lety +1

      Is that a euphemism for he’s a neo nazi and you agree with him?

    • @j.cdenton2403
      @j.cdenton2403 Před 2 lety

      @@unslaadkrosis3489 and you're pure?

    • @EliStettner
      @EliStettner Před rokem +2

      He also like, denies the holocaust

    • @mircopaul5259
      @mircopaul5259 Před rokem +5

      @@EliStettner Do you actually know what happened or do you just believe everything you are told?

    • @EliStettner
      @EliStettner Před rokem

      @@mircopaul5259 I have direct ancestors who perished.

  • @Nata-ch2bk
    @Nata-ch2bk Před 2 lety +146

    Having just started with Chess 960, I find it much more fun. You have to be creative and think about the position right from the start, rather than play like a robot for the first 5+ moves.
    In classic chess it's kind of discouraging as a semi-new player to know that, no matter how much potential/talent you have for the game in terms of intuition and creativity, you won't be able to go up in elo until you've done a ton of memorization work on opening theory, because you will be facing opponents who have been doing that work already, sometimes for decades.
    Those opponents will gain advantages (sometimes winning advantages) over you right from the 5-10+ first moves, just because they played the memorized perfect chess moves for that opening, and you haven't.
    Some people have tried to debunk the argument by saying that if Chess 960 becomes the main chess game, it will also start to have opening theory and will face the same issues. I think these people don't really understand what they are saying.
    Just think about how much opening theory and memorization work you have to do currently for just 1 single starting position. Of course you could eventually, decades from now, have the same kind of exhaustive opening theory for the 960 starting positions, but humans won't be able to memorize it as well as they do for 1 single position. That's just way too much information and Chess 960 will be about creativity and talent probably forever, unless humans evolve and their brain become like machines and/or they can live for hundreds of years (to memorize all that).
    Therefore, players of Chess 960 will have to work on the most beautiful chess qualities : improvisation, intuition, tactics, general strategical ideas, and end game mastery. Meùorizing the first 5-10+ moves of a given opening will be a thing of the past.

    • @ggblee
      @ggblee Před 2 lety +5

      I used to agree with your sentiment when i first started chess, but now that i've gotten better, i disagree.
      I disagree because opening theory is just one aspect of a game in chess. Yes, everyone who plays a game will have to go through the opening. However, if the opening was such a big deal, everyone would be able to draw in the middle or end-game on an equal position board, or win when they have an advantage out of the opening, which is just not true.
      I can see how it is discouraging though when players do not know what they don't know about openings and everyone talks about openings they are fond of like they know everything. Imo the truth is either they dont know anything or they know a lot cause they play chess a lot lol 😄
      The secret to knowing openings is to just play something, keep experimenting, and to have fun!

    • @Nata-ch2bk
      @Nata-ch2bk Před 2 lety +12

      ​@@ggblee Actually, you're not disagreeing with the point of my comment, you're confirming it.
      I never said that opening theory was the main aspect of standard chess. What I said is that it is a *necessary* component of it, and it takes A LOT of time to memorize it. And people who don't do that tedious memorization work are at a disadvantage compared to people who spend countless hours/days/years doing it.
      The point is that, for me, tedious memorization of opening theory shouldn't be a requisite for being good at a well-designed chess game. Hence why I think chess960 is a superior game to standard chess.
      But chess960 is probably never going to become popular, at least not in our lifetime, because people interesting in chess are already too used to standard chess, and they've already spent those countless hours learning opening theory for that one starting position, and they don't want all this tedious work to go to waste.

    • @Elrog3
      @Elrog3 Před 2 lety +1

      Intuition, yes. Talent, yes. Creativity, no. Creativity has absolutely nothing to do with chess, computer or not.

    • @Nata-ch2bk
      @Nata-ch2bk Před 2 lety +2

      @@Elrog3 Creativity is a very loose term, you can fit many things into it.
      Devising a strategy from a completely new position you've never seen before requires creativity.
      Conversely, copying openings and strategies from memorised positions that you studied in books or videos, doesn't require creativity, just a god sense of understanding and a good memory.

    • @Elrog3
      @Elrog3 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Nata-ch2bk I wouldn't classify deductive reasoning as creativity.

  • @CertifiedClapaholic
    @CertifiedClapaholic Před 2 lety +3

    What he is saying in the beginning is that the higher you get into the stratosphere of chess theory, the less of a creative dance it is and it becomes this set of logical lines that become predictable. It's not quite solved but it probably becomes repetitive and turns into an endurance exercise more so than a creativity exercise.

  • @pashapasovski5860
    @pashapasovski5860 Před 6 měsíci +3

    Bobby predicted what chess is becoming!

  • @jasonbourne4784
    @jasonbourne4784 Před 2 lety +254

    Yep, learning chess is literally like getting a PhD in terms of how much and how long you need to study. And it's just a game. Why waste that much time to crush noobs online?

    • @bandicootsav2270
      @bandicootsav2270 Před 2 lety +35

      But they aren't. People who are getting a Chess PhD are people like Hikaru and Magnus. Do you think they are successful, famous, and overall content with life because they are crushing noobs? Their lives are much more than "crushing noobs." They have fans, tourtements, etc! Just because they are good at a board game, does not mean they are any less valuable as a good Olympian, as they exceed the human limit and art of Chess

    • @sylvesteruchia5263
      @sylvesteruchia5263 Před 2 lety +8

      If you don't like chess then dont play.

    • @RiksK15
      @RiksK15 Před 2 lety +52

      @@bandicootsav2270 There are so many GMs out there who clearly have put as much time and effort and talent into it, and are not famous, or rich or anything, and in fact probably have had to stop playing chess professionally due to financial reasons. Most titled players are not Magnus or Hikaru.

    • @khangle6872
      @khangle6872 Před 2 lety +19

      @@bandicootsav2270 not everyone is magnus, do you know how many grand master on this planet and how many do you know?
      Hikaru or magnus success does not guarantee others.
      For example if right now you study every line of the sicillian defense, how famous would you become? How much money would you make?
      Even if you become a international master, you are still nothing in the chess world, like, how many IM can you name right now aside from Levy? And how much theory you must learn to become one?

    • @BOZ_11
      @BOZ_11 Před 2 lety +15

      @@bandicootsav2270 "Just because they are good at a board game, does not mean they are any less valuable as a good Olympian, as they exceed the human limit and art of Chess".
      Firstly, no way are these guys on the same level as Olympic athletes; secondly, Chess is among the least artistic forms of 1 vs 1 games/sports. If my smartphone can whoop Magnus, then creativity is absent (absent enough that Fischer is correct).

  • @KoiBoiRoi
    @KoiBoiRoi Před 3 lety +120

    "Best thing since puffed weed" Wait till he finds out about the Bongcloud opening.

    • @bruh7679
      @bruh7679 Před 3 lety +5

      he literally invented it😔

    • @orlock20
      @orlock20 Před 3 lety +1

      @@bruh7679 I call it the King Sashay because the Bongcloud is one pawn move and one king move while the King Sashay is two pawn moves followed by five or six king moves.

    • @denisdooley1540
      @denisdooley1540 Před 3 lety +1

      @@orlock20 I think it's fair to say he came up with the basic idea, but I think his underlying purpose was different. Fisher just wanted to take the game out of "book moves" as soon as possible to get away from what he talks about in this clip (assuming that was Fisher playing online it's never been verified). The BC is meant to disorient your opponent and, perhaps, make them overconfident.

    • @desaifamily8239
      @desaifamily8239 Před 3 lety +2

      @@denisdooley1540 Also to intimidate them in today’s meta

  • @petercofrancesco9812
    @petercofrancesco9812 Před 2 lety +38

    edited: My bad. I thought he was laughing at Bobby. Yeah that is funny.

    • @jefflittle8913
      @jefflittle8913 Před 2 lety +6

      He wasn't laughing at Bobby Fisher. He was laughing when the guy with the accent said "the best player ever" and the closed caption translated it as "the masterbator".

    • @astavas8341
      @astavas8341 Před 2 lety +5

      He laugh at the subtitle "kappa blanket", and all

    • @alexsatt8340
      @alexsatt8340 Před 2 lety

      Nobody is mocking the Legend, we are laughing at the wrong captions... where's your Empathy? xD

  • @maheralhossaini9615
    @maheralhossaini9615 Před rokem +5

    I disagree with Hikaru and think that Fischer nailed it. Chess, unlike finance and other games, is a determistic and fully observable game. It is like Tic Tac Toe but bigger, in that it will be SOLVED one day (at least theoretcally but I belive practically) and no one will play it again then. It is better to enhance it now with randomness / latent variables than to let it die naturally.

    • @madjoe8622
      @madjoe8622 Před rokem

      Good point

    • @nikitasharma7805
      @nikitasharma7805 Před 17 dny +1

      Solved one day? 😂 bro first of all, you can not make opinions based on a prediction you make , 2nd , it will NEVER be solved because it has more than 10^120 possible outcomes which is more than the numbers of atoms in the observable universe