5 Chess Games YOU MUST KNOW!

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  • Опубликовано: 3 фев 2025

Комментарии • 1,9 тыс.

  • @nicoackermann2249
    @nicoackermann2249 3 года назад +3678

    I'm always impressed how people can remember full games of other people or even their own.

    • @akusalonen7512
      @akusalonen7512 3 года назад +849

      I remember one, e4 e5 Qh5 Ke7 Qxe5

    • @nobody7557
      @nobody7557 3 года назад +62

      @@akusalonen7512 xD

    • @ragheborfali3432
      @ragheborfali3432 3 года назад +89

      Its ez for me because of the insomnia, when you're awake at 3 a.m, there's nothing better to do

    • @georgepantzikis7988
      @georgepantzikis7988 3 года назад +55

      I don't remember many games (and by that I mean I only know four), but the ones I do know I learnt by playing them over and over otb and in my head because I liked them. If you get excited enough about a game it'll probably stick.

    • @timt6312
      @timt6312 3 года назад +35

      Its not that hard. Im only 1300 but when i joined a local chessclub and started playing long games for hours i also could remember the entire game. It helps if u enter all games in the analisys board online later and talk the game through afterwards

  • @tiletapper4ever
    @tiletapper4ever Год назад +52

    The second game is absolutely incredible. Black had the whole army, with the exception of the loss of just 3 pawns, while white had sacrificed both rooks, the queen and a bishop. e5 was crazy to find out. That's a game that really looked unreal. Wow

    • @logechi3661
      @logechi3661 3 месяца назад

      No actually

    • @morcvec8157
      @morcvec8157 2 месяца назад

      Yet it's knight A6 instead of bishop C6 on 14:44 what lost this game, everything before was okay and led to a solid black win.

  • @matthewbless3335
    @matthewbless3335 3 года назад +1948

    24:05 LCMDLB is extremely lucky that en passant wouldn't become a forced move until later in chess history.

    • @JirivandenAssem
      @JirivandenAssem 3 года назад +74

      a man of culture u are!

    • @LoLXaxziminrax
      @LoLXaxziminrax 3 года назад +119

      We hadn't scaled up brick production as a society yet. A real lifesaver that this game happened when it did.

    • @sucamchi9872
      @sucamchi9872 3 года назад +23

      Google

    • @turtle_fps
      @turtle_fps 3 года назад +34

      @@sucamchi9872 holy hell!

    • @ayobruh5593
      @ayobruh5593 3 года назад +18

      im mad he didnt play it

  • @robertreid2931
    @robertreid2931 2 года назад +333

    The thing I love about the Opera Game is what Levy hinted at - chess wasn't anywhere near as well understood at the time. Morphy was figuring out what most chess players now take for granted. He singlehandedly brought chess to the next level, then retired from chess at 22, because he felt it was a frivolous pursuit. Possibly chess's most enigmatic figure.

    • @robertreid2931
      @robertreid2931 Год назад +1

      @@balisticSkip 🙄

    • @AsadAli-jc5tg
      @AsadAli-jc5tg Год назад

      Greco was even more

    • @vergilthealphaandomega8189
      @vergilthealphaandomega8189 Год назад +5

      @@balisticSkip No, Levy is correct

    • @aaronhoffmeyer
      @aaronhoffmeyer 9 месяцев назад +3

      Chess engines rate him at 2400, but his best opponents rate only at 2100. In fact, no one approached 2400 until Capablanca, nearly 70 years later.
      His mother wanted him to focus on his legal practice, but that was not where his head was. His family was rich, so he muttled at lawyering and kept his head down (after a stint of military experience during the Civil War). He was not enthused about the military, not enthused about being a lawyer, not enthused about women and relationships, became "disagreeable" in his 40s, and died of a supposed stroke at age 47.

    • @robertreid2931
      @robertreid2931 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@balisticSkip Hey boring person, make sure you're, you know, not wrong when you correct someone.

  • @thelanternexpress9371
    @thelanternexpress9371 3 года назад +6737

    Levy I want to thank you for your videos. Since watching, my rating has gone from 1200 to 800 in a week!

    • @Only_Nub
      @Only_Nub 3 года назад +137

      Nice

    • @rn6467
      @rn6467 3 года назад +250

      Uh 1200 to 800? Fellow r/anarchychess user?

    • @JirivandenAssem
      @JirivandenAssem 3 года назад +38

      LOL

    • @zelcat5794
      @zelcat5794 3 года назад +244

      400 point difference! truly insane

    • @blank3764
      @blank3764 3 года назад +85

      backward -knight- rating move

  • @OneOfUs-
    @OneOfUs- 2 года назад +381

    Honestly. these videos are so entertaining. From the incredible storytelling to the fact that anyone of any skill level can watch this and still follow along. I have never played a single game of chess in my life and don't know any of the theory, but I still feel the excitement and suspense from start to finish. Thank you for making chess so accessible and fun to everyone!

    • @paulwalther5237
      @paulwalther5237 Год назад +12

      Yeah I'm surprised too. I found out that as long as you know the rules, you know enough to enjoy watching a game of chess.

    • @jatoja88
      @jatoja88 Год назад +3

      Did you start playing?

    • @OneOfUs-
      @OneOfUs- Год назад +6

      @@jatoja88 yes, I’m not very good but I try!

  • @pops1cle187
    @pops1cle187 3 года назад +844

    8:25
    Levi: "They would move the their king as early as move 4"
    Hikaru and Magnus playing the bong cloud: "OUR goals are beyond your understanding"

    • @gaopinghu7332
      @gaopinghu7332 3 года назад +1

      Communists!

    • @the_potmo
      @the_potmo Год назад +2

      In fact, judit polgar and boris spaasky both played the bc4 line and happily moved their king to f1 so this isn't one of those "back in the day" situations (ok back in the seventies and eighties maybe)

  • @Garspawnish
    @Garspawnish 3 года назад +455

    After Anderssen's death in 1879, Wilhelm Steinitz published a tribute in The Field in which he annotated Anderssen's two most famous games, the Evergreen and the Immortal Game against Lionel Kieseritzky. Steinitz wrote, "An evergreen in the laurel crown of the departed chess hero", thus giving this game its name.”
    Allegedly.

    • @hanafuda
      @hanafuda Год назад +12

      There’s that, but also, “evergreen” has the same meaning as “immortal,” from a certain point of view.

    • @Snceday1
      @Snceday1 7 месяцев назад +1

      Googled then you copy and pasted

    • @anordinarydude1
      @anordinarydude1 6 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@Snceday1so what lmao this was 2 years ago

  • @roastghost901
    @roastghost901 3 года назад +810

    They say a perfect chess game ends in a draw, but I think game 3 is a better example of a perfect game: white checkmates black while black has mate in 1.

    • @isavenewspapers8890
      @isavenewspapers8890 3 года назад +14

      That’s a terminology conflict

    • @mootezbenzekri7806
      @mootezbenzekri7806 3 года назад +4

      20:37 In game 3 after re7+, what if black play kd8? Then black will win!!

    • @mainaccount763
      @mainaccount763 3 года назад +14

      omae wa mou shindeiru
      nani

    • @mainaccount763
      @mainaccount763 3 года назад +13

      @@mootezbenzekri7806 rxd7, and king can't run from the d rank

    • @isavenewspapers8890
      @isavenewspapers8890 3 года назад +8

      @@mootezbenzekri7806 Then simply Rxd7+ Kc8 Rd8+ Kxd8 Bf5+ Qxd1 Qxd1+ Nd4 Bh3 Re8 cxd4 and White is simply winning

  • @exoplanet11
    @exoplanet11 3 года назад +16

    My first chess computer program was Chessmaster 2000 in 1983 on an Apple Iic. I still remember that it had an option where you could call up a few old game, including "Evergreen" and A's "Immortal".

  • @KrazyCouch2
    @KrazyCouch2 3 года назад +503

    When Levy said there wasn't gonna be any crazy queen sacs for insane mates with the last game, I was skeptical of how awesome it would be, but I think that's the most beautiful game of Chess I have seen in my life!

    • @justinbrockhaus4389
      @justinbrockhaus4389 3 года назад +8

      Look up kasparovs immortal game. Absolutely stunning

    • @woodys9841
      @woodys9841 3 года назад +7

      For me it is either Ivanchuks immortal against Kasparov or Capablanca vs Marshall. Both are so damn beautiful.

    • @nextgenfootball69420
      @nextgenfootball69420 3 года назад +2

      nah i couldve played that game on blitz, it wasnt as great as andersons

    • @woodys9841
      @woodys9841 3 года назад +1

      @@nextgenfootball69420 Karpov would crush your family's honour in 10 moves or less you bozo, you are probably sub 1k elo to make such a moronic assumption.

    • @psychedelictoons8616
      @psychedelictoons8616 3 года назад +1

      @@woodys9841 shush it, reiTurd, 1'll checkm8 yo M0m in the back ranks

  • @singl3s3rvingfri3nds2
    @singl3s3rvingfri3nds2 Год назад +17

    I just love watching him explain ideas behind their moves, Such enthusiasm and personal like he is playing himself

  • @advancedPawn
    @advancedPawn 3 года назад +146

    There are slick checkmate and then there is the "3 Pawn End Zone Rush" checkmate that game 4 had. Very wicked.

  • @nurilnuril4372
    @nurilnuril4372 Год назад +57

    These games were insane. Thanks for opening my eyes to the world of chess. There's so much potential in this game and so many stories to tell. You really created a niché for yourself being a great chess player and a great storyteller. Hats off to you

  • @anacreon212
    @anacreon212 3 года назад +593

    the octopus knight being so powerful it was worth 9 points of material. That is insane.

    • @noticeme6412
      @noticeme6412 2 года назад +48

      should be a boss battle

    • @jordanmcmorris5248
      @jordanmcmorris5248 2 года назад +25

      The most powerful octopus knight to ever live

    • @ivoryas1696
      @ivoryas1696 Год назад

      ​@@jordanmcmorris5248
      In America, you give up Knight for rook.
      In Soviet Russia...

  • @horatiohornblower3757
    @horatiohornblower3757 2 года назад +75

    Game 4, wow. That was so much fun.

  • @StevieBee75
    @StevieBee75 3 года назад +117

    Loved this episode even though I knew most of the games. Would love to see this continued. Especially Bc I feel like older games before so much theory and engines the attacks were so belligerent and are fun to watch

    • @RMF49
      @RMF49 3 года назад +3

      Take a look at Estrin vs Berliner if you haven’t seen it. Kingscrusher has a nice video of it.

    • @Apna_channel777
      @Apna_channel777 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/1LpLGhCc_CE/видео.html

  • @billprovince8759
    @billprovince8759 3 года назад +10

    No list is going to cover everything perfectly, but Kasparov vs. Topalov is yet another fantastic game. I once had the opportunity to ask Kasparov about his personal favorite game, and he selected his game vs. Topalov. If I caught him on a different day, he may have selected his game vs Karpov instead. Both of these games are considered his "immortals", and it's hard to select the "best" one.

  • @Thiefwriter
    @Thiefwriter 3 года назад +227

    Been waiting for a vid like this forever! Thanks for all your grind and effort Levy, you're a legit asset to the game and community of chess and we appreciate all your work!

    • @alexethan7469
      @alexethan7469 3 года назад +3

      Agreed.
      Lol the bots already

    • @Thiefwriter
      @Thiefwriter 3 года назад +1

      @@alexethan7469 Bots? These are clearly Real Women(TM) who want to get to know you now. Seriously though they were lightning fast. RIP for the poor bastards who actually click those links.

  • @Mag_Nus32
    @Mag_Nus32 2 года назад +106

    Levy's obviously sick at chess but his presentation and teaching skills and his blatant enthusiasm really make these videos. Really fun 36 minutes!

    • @ashir...897
      @ashir...897 Год назад

      C'mon bro i am sure he is most likely at the very least amount the top 3% of chess players you don't need to be so cruel

    • @WALTER-zw2tc
      @WALTER-zw2tc Год назад +3

      Isn’t he like 2400? Way lower than 3%

  • @danclaydon6588
    @danclaydon6588 3 года назад +68

    Top tier content, Gotham. Hard to mess up a video about such amazing games but as always you bring so much contagious enthusiasm. We need a sequel.

  • @sarthaksaxena4850
    @sarthaksaxena4850 20 дней назад +1

    Hi Levy, not sure if you get notified but I keep watching this video again and again. I'd really appreciate if we get more game compilations or individual game reviews like the Mamedyarov vs Giri/Rapport and the Wei Yi one. The best videos to watch imo

  • @flippsyslippsy
    @flippsyslippsy 3 года назад +12

    These games were absolutely incredible! Also, I believe the two men in game 4 have opening variations named after them: The McDonnell Attack in the Sicilian Defense (e4, c5, f4) and La Bourdonnais Variation in the French Defense (e4, e6, f4)

  • @peregrinoperdido2491
    @peregrinoperdido2491 3 года назад +9

    Great compilation. One of the best Gotham videos ever. It is a fun to watch and when Levy is in a good mood his comments are great. Well done!

  • @dipakbhatt16
    @dipakbhatt16 3 года назад +9

    AMAZING AMAZING COMMENTARY!!!!! One of the best videos on chess games I have seen in a long time. Great job Levy!!!! It's nice that you posted these games of the masters. It was very refreshing to watch. I will revisit this clip in future... Thank you!!!

  • @ManuAsterion
    @ManuAsterion 3 года назад +4

    A nice trivia about The Immortal Game is that it is the the game Sebastian and Tyrell are playing in the film Blade Runner, and, without spoiling too much, Roy Batty's quest to defeat death in that film mirrors the sacrifices of the white pieces.

  • @itilkildrenslegacy9605
    @itilkildrenslegacy9605 3 года назад +118

    As for the evergreen, steinitz at the time said it was Anderssen' best game and, like a laurel crown, would have remained evergreen and never fade.
    A bit over dramatic maybe, but he was definitely right
    Edit: had to wiki who said it

    • @skys-_7242
      @skys-_7242 2 года назад +1

      hello i just wanna ask about the third game go to 16:43 black can fork the king and the rook with bxc3 ??

    • @Charlie_Davidson
      @Charlie_Davidson 2 года назад +2

      @@skys-_7242 - no because then white will take the Bishop on c3 with the Knight.

  • @tristansmeets6086
    @tristansmeets6086 2 года назад +9

    The fact the kasparov game isnt called Dark Knight is a shame

  • @AM_-wg1hj
    @AM_-wg1hj 3 года назад +87

    4:19 Imagine Morphy actually calling them bozos

    • @uwerlmi6120
      @uwerlmi6120 3 года назад

      @@melaniee___1486 what the fuck was that

    • @andreja9119
      @andreja9119 3 года назад +1

      @@uwerlmi6120 bots my man

  • @petv.8453
    @petv.8453 3 года назад +7

    When the Queen took at d7 at 20:50 I was staring in disbelief with goose bumps

  • @volodyadykun6490
    @volodyadykun6490 3 года назад +106

    Anderssen: one of the best chess players ever
    Anderssen's opening: one of the best too

    • @worsethanjoerogan8061
      @worsethanjoerogan8061 3 года назад +4

      Morphy made him look pretty weak though

    • @noahsvirsky9962
      @noahsvirsky9962 3 года назад +43

      @@worsethanjoerogan8061 Morphy made everyone look weak

    • @ThePapaja1996
      @ThePapaja1996 3 года назад

      Wunder if Williham steinitz should stand a chans to Paul Murphy

    • @dr.bluesfield3629
      @dr.bluesfield3629 3 года назад +12

      ​@@ThePapaja1996 Although they never played each other directly, (not even when Steinitz visited Morphy in New Orleans as Paul sadly refused to even discuss chess with him!), there's a fascinating indirect comparison between them through Anderssen.
      While Adolf didn't stand a snowball's chance in hell against Morphy, he actually had a positive score against Steinitz up until 1866 and an about even lifetime score after he got older!
      Which speaks volumes about Morphys incredible strength, and that without ever studying the game for even a minute, talk about some natural talent there.... it's unsurpassed to this day... imagine what could have become of Morphy's playing strength had he put similar effort into studying the game like e.g. Bobby did, who lived and breathed chess almost 24/7. And with today's resources... it's beyond imagination, how strong he could have become, who knows, he might have been able to challenge Leela?.. well, maybe not quite, but for sure he could be beyond 3000 ELO today :)

    • @achyuththouta6957
      @achyuththouta6957 3 года назад

      @@worsethanjoerogan8061 He didn't. Morphy just won a few games against him by memorising some openings

  • @agastyawiraputra2208
    @agastyawiraputra2208 3 года назад +5

    Those Immortal and Kasparov vs Karpov games were amazing.

  • @tipemotions
    @tipemotions 3 года назад +22

    The choices you made are amazing, i am a big fan of Morphy and De la Bourdonnaise, i never knew the games you showed of Anderssen, i will have to watch them again. I think i would have put a game from Tal and probably the 1956 Fisher Byrne game (i think that's my all time favourite tho)

    • @tipemotions
      @tipemotions 3 года назад +3

      I just realised i should have actually said Byrne Fisher as Bobby was playing with black 🤦‍♂️

    • @RMF49
      @RMF49 3 года назад +2

      @@tipemotions Game of the Century or the other one vs the other Byrne?

    • @anirbanghosh1217
      @anirbanghosh1217 3 года назад +2

      U cant put a game of Tal for "beginners must know" coz his games are too complicated. Brilliant but too complicated 🙃

    • @tipemotions
      @tipemotions 3 года назад

      @@RMF49 game of the century 👍

  • @exuviumisopods
    @exuviumisopods 3 года назад +6

    That has never occurred to me in the past: watching so many videos from a single YT channel. Levy, your passion for chess worth much more than you could ever imagine. These were fantastic games! 🤩

  • @ginoginoh
    @ginoginoh 3 года назад +27

    The last game reminds me of some of the recent Leela games: sacrifice a pawn for initiative and saying "that pawn hurts you more than me".

    • @tomcads1604
      @tomcads1604 3 года назад +4

      Kasparov was so far ahead of his time

  • @petepalmere210
    @petepalmere210 2 года назад +3

    Levy, I noticed a similar use of the Octopus Knight on d3 in the Fischer-R. Byrne game in the 1963 US Championship. In fact, Byrne has his Queen and Rook aligned up identically behind the Knight as in the Kasparov game. The knight in this case did not stay there long but was used with lethal effect as a sac on f2 with the game ending at around move 21. That Fischer went 11-0 in this tourney speaks to his prowess at the time. Fischer has a way of burning the Byrne Brothers (pun intended).

  • @madmalkav6540
    @madmalkav6540 3 года назад +39

    First game: "White played a solid game, but black was just moving pieces without a plan... They must be 800, 900 top"

    • @gaopinghu7332
      @gaopinghu7332 3 года назад +1

      Guess the elo lmao

    • @Lothar445
      @Lothar445 2 года назад +6

      That's what happens when you're so much ahead of everyone in your time.
      It wouldn't surprise me if these guys were actually pretty good players who just didn't know any theory since it was such early times.

    • @lukasg4807
      @lukasg4807 2 года назад

      @@Lothar445 they were casual players. Morphy played them after being invited to the opera with them, but he wanted to win as fast as possible because he wasn't facing the stage while playing.

  • @weignerleigner3037
    @weignerleigner3037 2 года назад +6

    Idk why but morphy is so fascinating to me. To me he is the greatest. The fact he’s so old and yet out of all the chess players in history his name is still brought up as one of the best even by people who don’t want to give him credit.

  • @sanidhay4841
    @sanidhay4841 3 года назад +14

    Definitely is a must video on this channel, love the classics

    • @deathangel4788
      @deathangel4788 3 года назад

      my guy u have not even seen half of it

    • @veselinjokanovic3032
      @veselinjokanovic3032 3 года назад

      Classic games are fun for us noobs. There is no way I can understand GM's moves today. Like I see a move and the GMs be like *moves king from g1 to h1 because of pin in the next 7 moves* like gtfo bro

  • @jazzbandtrio8569
    @jazzbandtrio8569 3 года назад +8

    The last game reminds me of engine games, they maximize the piece activeness with outstanding ideas.

  • @knzo13
    @knzo13 3 года назад +48

    Those games were absolutely stunning! The brilliancy of some of those moves was truly impressive! I never knew chess could be so beautiful, thank you Levy!

    • @Apna_channel777
      @Apna_channel777 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/1LpLGhCc_CE/видео.html

  • @michaelhunter2136
    @michaelhunter2136 Год назад +2

    Stunning video! Not only does this thing have amazing games but the blow-by-blow descriptions help modest chess players appreciate the battle of titans. Very well done. I have goosebumps.

  • @DionysisGalanis
    @DionysisGalanis 3 года назад +5

    To me Morphy's Opera game is the Titanic of chess games. So simple yet so epic. It's the most iconic chess game in my eyes. Whoever is silly enough to criticize a Morphy's move during that game as sub-optimal forgets that these moves are golden, much superior and more artistic than any other engine move and these golden moves make what this game is. A masterpiece.

    • @jamesknapp64
      @jamesknapp64 3 года назад +4

      Stienetz said "Morphy should have played Qxb7, and not was sub par play". Lasker also said the same. This lead to one of the most Gangster Chess quotes of all time "Qxb7 is a *BUTCHER'S* Move! Morphy is an Artist!"

  • @GregoryK-IYA
    @GregoryK-IYA Год назад +8

    I think this list is brilliant, but it's missing one more. The 17 pawn moves game shows the incredible power of solid pawn structures and taking space.

  • @mattboemer4549
    @mattboemer4549 3 года назад +19

    You always post diverse and quality content, like going over past chess games and then all your series plus reviews of the world championship like damn

    • @Apna_channel777
      @Apna_channel777 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/1LpLGhCc_CE/видео.html

  • @LukeVenables
    @LukeVenables Год назад +1

    I'm just starting to learn chess strategy because my son is getting into it. This video was at the perfect level for me. I appreciate how you worked through the moves a little slower but mostly that you explained why those moves were made. Grwat video.

  • @Kildar2009
    @Kildar2009 3 года назад +5

    Awesome video! Would like to see this series continue with more historic games!

  • @handleisntavailble
    @handleisntavailble 2 года назад +1

    I love chess and all but I have never been entertained in a chees game before till i saw this vid and the last game was fascinating. Beautiful game by Kasparov

  • @RandomChessPerson
    @RandomChessPerson 3 года назад +26

    31:20 "It [the knight] isn't going to eat its friend." Good to know, Gotham.

    • @Apna_channel777
      @Apna_channel777 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/1LpLGhCc_CE/видео.html

  • @egaputera7290
    @egaputera7290 2 года назад

    i love how you always say in the latter parts of the video 'if we had enough patience to stick this far'.
    bro. youre the goat in chess youtube, your viewers are most likely goat in chess youtube watching too. haha. cheers from hk bro. awesome stuff. hope to learn here

  • @ah93704
    @ah93704 3 года назад +41

    What I admire about Anderson is that after losing to Morphy he improved his own game and gave Steinitz fits in their world championship match. That to me is an even greater accomplishment than these two epic games. Loved the video Levi

  • @josevillanueva9705
    @josevillanueva9705 Год назад +1

    That opera game was mad. Sacrifices everything for a win

  • @vsummon6991
    @vsummon6991 Год назад +3

    I was literally a biggener at chess.... after watching your videos i am now a grandmaster in clickbaiting

  • @hela_4758
    @hela_4758 Год назад +1

    Broooo the three musketeer pawns are the real mvp!!!! Absolute savage!!!!!

  • @yotamabady7457
    @yotamabady7457 3 года назад +15

    You should make a part 2 for this with games like steinitz vs von bardeleben and byrne vs Fischer. There are so many games as good and famous as those in the video

    • @Apna_channel777
      @Apna_channel777 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/1LpLGhCc_CE/видео.html

  • @BrianAnthonyClayton
    @BrianAnthonyClayton 10 месяцев назад +1

    Ty for this video, I'm new to chess and your explanations alone helped me improve my approach to strategy. Also, the tree does make a sound if no one is around to hear it. Simply because sound waves exist despite no one being around to perceive them.

  • @petrolaishev2656
    @petrolaishev2656 2 года назад +3

    3:42 best voicecrack

  • @Thystan2000
    @Thystan2000 5 месяцев назад

    I've been working night shifts and just watching your videos. They teach me a lot of ways to use pawns, use the h/a pawns and how to use diagonals that do not cross the center. Thank you for being a nice talkative dude. Would love to play sometime!
    On a side note, I expected you would put a Mikhael Tal game on here, as you were a big fan of him in another video

  • @matthies8431
    @matthies8431 3 года назад +15

    I think you should have added the game with the king walk, the game of the century by Bobby Fischer, some game by Mikhail Tal and the game from Garry Kasparov with the insane calculations.

    • @abj136
      @abj136 3 года назад +4

      That would be Kasparov-Topalov with the double rook sac.

    • @ThePapaja1996
      @ThePapaja1996 3 года назад

      He did a video there he talk about that game.

    • @matthies8431
      @matthies8431 3 года назад

      @@ThePapaja1996 but he also did a video on the opera game

    • @davidcopson5800
      @davidcopson5800 2 года назад

      @@abj136 Not necessarily. There is another game of Kasparov beating Karpov in a wc match where the video is entitled 'Kasparov's insane calculations'.

  • @MathPhysicsEngineering
    @MathPhysicsEngineering 3 года назад +2

    I think the 5-th game should have been the game between Kasparov VS Topalov whith the double rook sacrfices. This is widley considered as the best game of all time and Kasparov said that this is the best game he ever played.

  • @gianlucabelli8118
    @gianlucabelli8118 3 года назад +6

    You could have done like 5 + bonus with that amazing game with the King run with King up one square mate (sadly i don't remember who played it), that would have been perfect

    • @caseywhieldon2506
      @caseywhieldon2506 3 года назад +2

      Short-Timman 1993

    • @gianlucabelli8118
      @gianlucabelli8118 3 года назад +1

      @@caseywhieldon2506 ty man

    • @davictor24
      @davictor24 3 года назад +3

      @@caseywhieldon2506 nope it is Edward Lasker vs George Alan Thomas (1912)

  • @acousticarchivefortwayne930
    @acousticarchivefortwayne930 Месяц назад

    For me, playing chess is about the experience of seeing patterns and visualizing outcomes. There were moves in these games where I didn't know what was about to happen. Thanks Levy, you're a great guide.

  • @hellohi2413
    @hellohi2413 3 года назад +13

    keep up the interesting content man, it is greatly appreciated :D

  • @yunguanglu5709
    @yunguanglu5709 Год назад +1

    I really love these games and your videos are amazing. Keep up with the good work brotha

  • @tts8907
    @tts8907 3 года назад +4

    This was fun. I am relatively new to chess, so yes, these games are a real treat and now I want more. Thank you!

  • @LaVieDeReine86
    @LaVieDeReine86 Месяц назад

    At 31:44 If you're interested, the plural of octopus is octopuses in English, oktopodes in Greek, and octopedes in Latin. Octopi is not a word in any language. The reason being, the -i plural is only for 2nd declension masculine nouns with -us as a suffix e.g. gladius (sword) radius, populus etc. -pus is a morpheme meaning 'foot,' not a -us suffix. This means it is pluralised to feet i.e. pedes.

  • @leloleli7508
    @leloleli7508 3 года назад +19

    Anderssen was a truly chess genius, absolute amazing games!

  • @Sahilow
    @Sahilow Год назад

    Watched two of these games in levys latest video too the same day how chess evolved over time

  • @rbcdelta6561
    @rbcdelta6561 3 года назад +17

    Chess before computers!! Daring and creativity showing the magic chess can be. Going to replay this video the next time I see two SGMs agree to a tournament draw after 8 moves. Thanks for the hard work!!

  • @thomasstunts
    @thomasstunts 3 месяца назад

    31:46 it actually is octopuses. The ruling on whether the word gets changed to "-pi" or "-uses" simply depends on whether it's Latin or Greek in origin.

  • @nickpispis9285
    @nickpispis9285 3 года назад +4

    This video was perfectly balanced in the amount of humor and instructive content. Well done Levy!

  • @BlueAcidball
    @BlueAcidball 3 года назад +1

    9:33 everybody gangsta until the bishop switches colors

  • @sahu4022
    @sahu4022 3 года назад +4

    Liked before I even started watching. I needed a story time with gotham for too long now!

  • @theclassicfan7002
    @theclassicfan7002 Год назад

    Man you're one of a kind... this channel of yours is Amazing. U talk about chess as if it's the most enjoyable thing in the world... I love it

  • @drewchilds3662
    @drewchilds3662 2 года назад +11

    Beautiful games and commentary

  • @digantaankan4997
    @digantaankan4997 Год назад

    That shutting the door and beating everyone up example was pretty badass. I now imagine the guy who played that move as a pure badass character. Thanks, Levi for making chess so fun!

  • @dylanlodge4905
    @dylanlodge4905 3 года назад +4

    Can we just acknowledge that this guy has been making vids for us for only a year now?

    • @dylanlodge4905
      @dylanlodge4905 3 года назад +2

      @Kilfa Nara shut up everyone gets a seizure reading ur messages and spam

  • @Paolo-wn5oy
    @Paolo-wn5oy Год назад +1

    16:54 I've heard about the Evans gambit two days ago by watching a video who tells us to crush weak opponents and make them cry by using that opening.

  • @legasa6343
    @legasa6343 26 дней назад +7

    Who's watching this in 1897

  • @cellularcrime4989
    @cellularcrime4989 2 года назад +1

    Idk how but Anderson was definitely using stockfish

  • @julius-lamaryehudah-yakout1602
    @julius-lamaryehudah-yakout1602 2 года назад +8

    well yes, it does make a sound, if we are defining sound as particles vibrating in air, even if no one is there, the falling of the tree will still physically affect its environment, its impact will produce a sound because the pressure exerted on the air around the falling tree is physically affected by the tree creating waves of vibrating air particles which moves outward from its center affecting the surrounding environment

    • @georgepapastavros1113
      @georgepapastavros1113 2 года назад

      Valid point, although even if you define sound like that, you can only hypothesize that it must have made a sound, not knowing the time it would happen. There is no way to test this, since it would not satisfy the question's requisite of no one being there to hear the supposed sound. I don't believe that hypothesis is a prediction, in conclusion. Also, if you define a sound more abstractly, how most humans would define it, the question answers itself. In more detail, a sound is something that is heard, but no one heard the supposed sound of the tree falling, so it's not a sound.

    • @georgepapastavros1113
      @georgepapastavros1113 2 года назад

      I'm standing on a technicality, basically: time. Saying a tree has fallen is different than saying a tree fell. When you examine the fallen tree you conclude to the first statement, time unspecified. Consequently, you can't know the sound that could have been made either, since the type of sound is a function of time of fall (because of chaos theory, a system like this is sensitive to initial conditions) which is unknown. So if you don't know these, how can you confirm the 'sound'.

    • @georgepapastavros1113
      @georgepapastavros1113 2 года назад

      And all of that is after forgetting the simple fact that the question is impossible since it is highly likely that the tree falling would affect at least one person. As you said, vibrating air particles move outward affecting the surrounding environment, and at least a human, even infinitesimally. To summarize, the premise of this question is wrong.

    • @AdamskiTee
      @AdamskiTee 2 года назад

      Take a breath Einstein

  • @OpenAirOutreach
    @OpenAirOutreach 11 месяцев назад

    Locking the door is a scene from A Bronx Tale. “Now yous cant leave.”

  • @clintongryke6887
    @clintongryke6887 3 года назад +3

    Great video! I've seen some of these before, but your explanations are entertaining and informative. Thanks.

  • @Lunai5444
    @Lunai5444 2 года назад +1

    "You were paying attention but you forgot because chess is hard".
    Damn dude..

  • @saharshbij
    @saharshbij 3 года назад +5

    Hey Gotham, can you please do a video on 'how to convert opening advantages into a win, in the middle game'? I struggle with that at times. My rating is 1500 and I can tell i have won the opening battle, but I still somehow play into a position where opponent somehow equalizes and my advantage is gone. It's frustrating.

  • @cloudjin893
    @cloudjin893 20 дней назад

    new to competitive chess and i just started to really watch these videos. dang that second game got me some type of way. didn't know chess can be that agressive!

  • @mittanmitra1817
    @mittanmitra1817 Год назад +3

    BEST VIDEO EVER BY LEVY

  • @denbleygv9238
    @denbleygv9238 11 месяцев назад

    27:48 I may be wrong but the final explanation seems wrong so it threw me off a bit bc it was McDonnell's turn to play. But it did come to the same conclusion of check mate.
    I used to play chess with my dad growing up and for some reason got interested in the game again. Really enjoying your vids. Thanks for putting them out!

  • @siriusblack7714
    @siriusblack7714 2 года назад +8

    Wow....these games are givinge chills with the outside of the box thinking these men used. It makes me feel like a monkey cause im just sitting here knowing dam well my brain could have never EVER thought in such a way

  • @iamtheteapot7405
    @iamtheteapot7405 2 года назад +2

    Great video dude! I think I've seen most of these games at one point or another but I love how you presented them all and how you strung them together. Thanks!

  • @ssik9460
    @ssik9460 3 года назад +38

    Virgin knowing a famous instructive game between two of the best players in the world
    vs
    CHAD knowing the first game where you beat your dad

  • @silencedogood5631
    @silencedogood5631 9 месяцев назад

    I actually taught Paul how to play an effective defense with the white pieces. He got pretty good after a while.

  • @KyleWarnUs
    @KyleWarnUs 3 года назад +5

    This is a wonderful series. I'm just a 600 Elo player, but I'm absolutely fascinated by breakdowns like this.

  • @almightyhydra
    @almightyhydra 3 года назад

    The Morphy game was in a book I had on chess I had as a kid named "Check Out Chess". (And wow, I've only just now realised, 27 years later, the pun on the word "check" !!) It finished the description of the game with "Of course, Morphy does not just give away queens for nothing. Can you see why he wanted the black knight moved? Can you see the checkmate?" Rd1-d8 checkmate (it used full algebraic notation)... "Now Morphy could turn around and watch the opera!"

  • @advancedPawn
    @advancedPawn 3 года назад +7

    Ok ok ok... Kasperov's game plan of not using minor pieces to do the taking even when it's perfectly possible is amazing. Out of the 5 recaps, Kasperov's is the best here.

  • @Scott.Vantas
    @Scott.Vantas Год назад +1

    These games are a wild ride from start to finish. Loved hearing about them. Instantly subscribed.

  • @weakw1ll
    @weakw1ll 2 года назад +8

    19:55 IM FUCKING DEAD😭

  • @rocketman3066
    @rocketman3066 3 года назад +1

    I think Fischer vs Donald Byrne (The Game of the Century) deserves to be here

  • @GNDBK
    @GNDBK Год назад +51

    Who’s watching in 2026

    • @itram99
      @itram99 9 месяцев назад +8

      Where are my bros from 2028

    • @Arikato_sama
      @Arikato_sama 8 месяцев назад +1

      It 2024

    • @CMYTOfficial
      @CMYTOfficial 6 месяцев назад +1

      Nah, it’s 2029 for me

    • @Melvin-nt9xu
      @Melvin-nt9xu 6 месяцев назад +2

      Time dilation hitting hard

    • @CMYTOfficial
      @CMYTOfficial 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@Melvin-nt9xu this black hole is actually quite nice

  • @CommanderPaulB
    @CommanderPaulB 2 года назад

    Adolf Anderssens Immortal Game was like a Stockfish one,sacrificing for position and thinking ahead!
    Very intriguing