Music Banter

Music Banter (https://www.musicbanter.com/)
-   Media (https://www.musicbanter.com/media/)
-   -   Chess (https://www.musicbanter.com/media/95409-chess.html)

YorkeDaddy 01-04-2021 12:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by OccultHawk (Post 2153848)
It startled me that you thought that even needs to pointed out.

I just thought it was important to emphasize how truly limitless the game's depth is in case someone who knows next to nothing about chess wanders into the thread. I think just about everybody knows some of the absolute barebones basics about the game but many people are unaware of the fact that it is still taken very seriously and played worldwide to this day.

Quote:

A friend of the family said their 10 year old daughter was really good at chess. I played her and she was trash. Didn't even know what castling is.
In most cases this probably translates to: my 10 year old daughter can beat me but she's never played anybody else lol

The Batlord 01-04-2021 01:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by YorkeDaddy (Post 2153837)
I'd been thinking about getting seriously into chess for a while now but after watching the Queen's Gambit recently, which was obviously a pretty excellent show with lots of interesting chess discussion, I've begun really deeply investing into the hobby. And it's a remarkably cheap hobby to get into considering it yields basically a lifetime of entertainment and its infinite skill ceiling. I could study every day for the rest of my life and still not get even close to being the best. And that kind of thing is what excites me, it's a hobby that's easy to get into and could theoretically never leave me bored.

All you have to do to start playing is make an account at chess.com. You can play infinitely for free against either bots or real players. Personally I've invested the small fee required to gain access to all the analytical tools and lessons. Particularly the lessons have been amazing, I've learned a lot in a short period of time.

Hopefully someone else here is as interested in the game as I am. Currently I am complete garbage at the game but I'm learning more every day. I'll always be looking for more friendly practice partners.

Oh great now there's gonna be a smarmy white guy chess fad that's gonna ruin it for a generation.

jwb 01-04-2021 01:21 PM

tbf chess has always been a smarmy white guy game

anyone here play go? harder than chess imo.

Marie Monday 01-04-2021 01:41 PM

I don't play it, but it's a game I'd like to learn. Do you play mahjong (the traditional Chinese way)?

jwb 01-04-2021 01:53 PM

I'm not sure. I play it as an app on my phone.

The concept is very simple but the game itself is very complex with a lot of options. Basically there are black stones and white stones, and a grid. each intersection on the grid counts as territory. If you surround an intersection or series of contiguous intersections with stones then that is your territory. if you surround a stone or a contiguous series of stones with your own stones then you capture those stones. each intersection of territory is a point and each stone you capture is a point. diagonal doesn't count, you have to surround them vertically and horizontally so you cut off any lines going into that territory.

Here's a decent youtube series to get you started if you're interested.


OccultHawk 01-04-2021 02:01 PM

Quote:

I just thought it was important to emphasize how truly limitless the game's depth is in case someone who knows next to nothing about chess wanders into the thread
But you used the word “best”

Sorry for being persnickety but “best”?

Marie Monday 01-04-2021 02:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jwb (Post 2153873)
I'm not sure. I play it as an app on my phone.

The concept is very simple but the game itself is very complex with a lot of options. Basically there are black stones and white stones, and a grid. each intersection on the grid counts as territory. If you surround an intersection or series of contiguous intersections with stones then that is your territory. if you surround a stone or a contiguous series of stones with your own stones then you capture those stones. each intersection of territory is a point and each stone you capture is a point. diagonal doesn't count, you have to surround them vertically and horizontally so you cut off any lines going into that territory.

Here's a decent youtube series to get you started if you're interested.


interesting, thanks.
the kind of mahjong found on computers (and I assume phones) is often not the 'real' kind, but who knows, maybe you found a good app

YorkeDaddy 01-04-2021 02:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jwb (Post 2153873)
I'm not sure. I play it as an app on my phone.

The concept is very simple but the game itself is very complex with a lot of options. Basically there are black stones and white stones, and a grid. each intersection on the grid counts as territory. If you surround an intersection or series of contiguous intersections with stones then that is your territory. if you surround a stone or a contiguous series of stones with your own stones then you capture those stones. each intersection of territory is a point and each stone you capture is a point. diagonal doesn't count, you have to surround them vertically and horizontally so you cut off any lines going into that territory.

Here's a decent youtube series to get you started if you're interested.


This looks like a more digestible form of Go. Official Go boards are ****ing enormous:

https://senseis.xmp.net/diagrams/33/...8b198c0f9b.png

Too much **** to keep track of

jwb 01-04-2021 02:07 PM

like i said I don't know if it's mahjong or whatever, it's just called Go. but its the same rules as described in the video.

jwb 01-04-2021 02:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by YorkeDaddy (Post 2153878)
This looks like a more digestible form of Go. Official Go boards are ****ing enormous:

https://senseis.xmp.net/diagrams/33/...8b198c0f9b.png

Too much **** to keep track of

there are options for board size. I start on the 9x9 to learn it. I play at 3 kyu difficulty and can barely beat the computer on a 9x9 board.


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 03:35 AM.


© 2003-2024 Advameg, Inc.