What makes Magnus Carlsen so good at chess | GothamChess and Lex Fridman

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  • Опубликовано: 16 янв 2025

Комментарии • 725

  • @snipzmattio5887
    @snipzmattio5887 2 года назад +3461

    When Magnus plays weird move he is a 'genius' and a 'chess prodigy'; but when i do it i get called and idiot and 400 elo

    • @apimpnamedslickback5936
      @apimpnamedslickback5936 2 года назад +178

      All that matters is if you win💀. When I blunder a queen and then checkmate in like 6 moves after I say it was a sack

    • @journees4300
      @journees4300 2 года назад +43

      Well, like Lord Hans always says: “Chess speaks for itself” 😅

    • @sanderkvenild8947
      @sanderkvenild8947 2 года назад +50

      Difference is he can follow through with his calculated line, ending in a better position than he started with. You get confused 2 moves later and abandon the line.

    • @generic395
      @generic395 2 года назад +5

      You got it easy, when Hans does it, he gets called a bot.

    • @jaideepshekhar4621
      @jaideepshekhar4621 2 года назад +8

      My god, Hans d riders invaded this space too? XD
      Why don't you dolts explain to me why Hans is scared shitless to analyse/explain HIS OWN GAMES?

  • @QNoland
    @QNoland Год назад +359

    My dad played Levi in Dallas 2 years ago (or maybe it was Vegas). Had a drawn position but lost it (my dad is trying to make master at 60 years old). He’s about 2100 right now. Quit for a long, long time in his “prime”, before computers came and changed the chess game. Levi was kind enough to go over the game 2 years ago with my dad. A rare thing when an IM beats an expert. Very down to earth guy

    • @prodmoira
      @prodmoira Год назад +14

      Hope your dad can do it❤

    • @thguzzo17
      @thguzzo17 7 месяцев назад +2

      Your dad is a legend

    • @QNoland
      @QNoland 7 месяцев назад +2

      Correction: it was the Vegas Open. Not Dallas

    • @QNoland
      @QNoland 7 месяцев назад +3

      @@thguzzo17 thanks to both of you! He’s been having some health problems lately (nothing serious) but he’s had to take some time off. Looking to play this a few tourneys to round out the year.

    • @stalwartzero7001
      @stalwartzero7001 5 месяцев назад +1

      Makes me think of Khabib talking about taking his enemies to deep water

  • @TheChessNeck
    @TheChessNeck 2 года назад +1358

    "They have to swim on their own" that was a cool quote. Like Magnus is taking them to the depths where you really need to know how to swim well.

    • @labramso
      @labramso 2 года назад +21

      That’s such a common phrase

    • @TheChessNeck
      @TheChessNeck 2 года назад +24

      @@labramso yeah I hear it in mma/boxing a lot. Still always sounds cool to me. Lol. I imagine just a 1on1 out in the ocean. All alone

    • @mastermax2792
      @mastermax2792 2 года назад +36

      I just imagine Magnus yeeting a kid into the deepest pool 😂

    • @ARS1508
      @ARS1508 2 года назад +8

      “Kid is on their own”

    • @BlueGrovyle
      @BlueGrovyle 2 года назад +17

      "The kids swim for themselves"

  • @igormorais4192
    @igormorais4192 2 года назад +457

    Carlsen has an eidetic chess memory, as well as just being a creative genius. It's hard to beat someone with either of those things, he's the greatest at both.

    • @MorphysinceC.E
      @MorphysinceC.E 2 года назад +1

      pffff

    • @newt2120
      @newt2120 2 года назад +7

      dont all GMs have eidetic memory?

    • @trequor
      @trequor 2 года назад +31

      Most GMs (all super-GMs) have a perfect memory when it comes to chess. You need a stellar IQ to be any kind of chess champion to start with

    • @trequor
      @trequor 2 года назад +11

      ​@@newt2120 Virtually all. Some might achieve GM status through sheer brute force studying, but most can memorize entire games... and hundreds of them.

    • @deanwilliams433
      @deanwilliams433 2 года назад +48

      @@trequor High IQ and chess ability has been disproven many times. In other terms lots of the skills that chess players have in terms of memory don't transfer to non-chess tasks. They are highly optimized for chess.

  • @miroslavstankov7919
    @miroslavstankov7919 2 года назад +721

    Magnus is simply on another level, in a league of his own.

    • @r00tw00t
      @r00tw00t 2 года назад

      He is cheating I have 'anal'yzed his games thoroughly

    • @bobjones5825
      @bobjones5825 2 года назад +14

      Rolled by Hans Niemann

    • @MeatBunFul
      @MeatBunFul 2 года назад +66

      @@bobjones5825 yeah that one loss totally made him way better than magnus

    • @apocalypseap
      @apocalypseap 2 года назад +23

      @@bobjones5825 Are you trolling? Because Magnus has lost to GM kids just fine. Getting beat once by someone doesn't mean that much.

    • @bobjones5825
      @bobjones5825 2 года назад

      @@apocalypseap Hans is the new goat. You will see shortly

  • @52000rightwing
    @52000rightwing 2 года назад +1423

    Levy is very good at explaining the nuts and bolts of the game. Not just, “if he takes here then I will recapture, blah blah.”

    • @brbcrew9957
      @brbcrew9957 2 года назад +25

      Blah blah of shame

    • @theurbanalgorithm
      @theurbanalgorithm 2 года назад +13

      Pure commentator

    • @tatzka90
      @tatzka90 2 года назад +28

      I can't teach my 8yo chess for 10 minutes but this guy taught kids many hours a day before covid. I guess that's where it stems from.

    • @songokulul
      @songokulul 2 года назад +14

      He's a great player, as well. I think he could be much better if he spent less time on the social aspect of being a chess player as opposed to just focusing on chess. But hey, he can do what he wants.

    • @himanshusalunkhe9602
      @himanshusalunkhe9602 2 года назад +8

      is this a shot at agadmator? If yes, I agree

  • @rudolphschmidt313
    @rudolphschmidt313 2 года назад +495

    It's incredibly rare to see a champion dominate his sport so much as magnus has. Especially when there's as much competition in the sport as there is.

    • @apocalypseap
      @apocalypseap 2 года назад +3

      Well, maybe not so much if Hans gets to keep playing...

    • @piergiorgio919
      @piergiorgio919 2 года назад +2

      @@apocalypseap there really isnt any evidence to show that he is cheating over the board tho

    • @27k3u4
      @27k3u4 2 года назад +2

      maybe he is cheating and therefore he is sure niemann cheated.

    • @tasnimulsarwar9189
      @tasnimulsarwar9189 2 года назад

      @@piergiorgio919 what about the 70 page report? What do you make of it?
      I haven't read it but I'm curious as to know what you make of it.

    • @piergiorgio919
      @piergiorgio919 2 года назад +11

      @@tasnimulsarwar9189 if you read the report you'd know it literally says there's nothing suspicious about niemann's OTB chess, it only talks about online chess

  • @apocalypseap
    @apocalypseap 2 года назад +128

    I think the real problem is that people don't get that Stockfish is evaluating a move based on a high level/perfect response. Maybe the person is not going to see that response at all, and that's where "knowing your opponent" REALLY comes into play. You can't just take look at the engine move and say "that move will always be bad." Maybe a particular opponent will be fooled by the first appearance of a particular structure and make a rash decision. It's happened many times.

    • @marcomaniaci8821
      @marcomaniaci8821 2 года назад +8

      I think I get what you're saying but the way you described it sounds like hope chess, playing a move that isn't the best in hopes that your opponent falls for it. I think what you're getting at is that you need to understand the reason and succession of moves before you play something. Otherwise you shouldn't?

    • @apocalypseap
      @apocalypseap 2 года назад +2

      @@marcomaniaci8821 exactly. Exploit your opponents weaknesses. That's how you win.

    • @thebcwonder4850
      @thebcwonder4850 8 месяцев назад +1

      ⁠@@marcomaniaci8821 almost all prep is high-level “hope chess”, getting to a position where your opponent can get into a bad position really quickly if they don’t play the best moved

    • @marcomaniaci8821
      @marcomaniaci8821 8 месяцев назад

      @@apocalypseap yeah on a very basic level I agree, no one is going to play the perfect line that a computer will therefore the best move isn’t necessarily the human viable option, I think my only gripe is that there is such a thing as optimal moves within a position so the idea that I’ll taylor a move to an opponent sounds off to me, perhaps I’ll play a different opening depending on a player profile? But the best move is the best move and that’s what I’ll always be looking for against an opponent. Let me know if I misinterpreted.

    • @marcomaniaci8821
      @marcomaniaci8821 8 месяцев назад

      @@thebcwonder4850 Yeah good players definitely squeeze water from stone. I don’t know if it’s hope chess since if the player doesn’t go the engine line they are usually also going to be playing viable moves which against another pro won’t generate TOO large of an advantage, but is the edge most players need to get a win, I agree with the notion though, gaining advantage by out prepping. I wouldn’t say that prep is based on hoping your opponent fails to play the proper move, there’s still a lot more game to play beyond the opening

  • @Изучениеусского
    @Изучениеусского 2 года назад +847

    Didn't expect Levy to come across so well but he did. Well spoken and intelligent guy, good choice of guest again Lex! Legends

    • @withoutwarningwow
      @withoutwarningwow 2 года назад +33

      U all need to join Levy's channel... Hes soo connected.. Love from Norway

    • @stagename2
      @stagename2 2 года назад +68

      Levy has a couple different gears that he switches between.

    • @TooChillery
      @TooChillery 2 года назад +33

      That’s weird that you initially thought that

    • @jornavyr2459
      @jornavyr2459 2 года назад +12

      Well, that's because he's disingenuous. Actually speak to the guy for a minute, and you'll realise what an absolute piece of filth that he is. But, when it's time to reach out to a new platform, then it's brown nose Levy going full force.

    • @hegeliandianetik2009
      @hegeliandianetik2009 2 года назад +7

      @@jornavyr2459 and when did you speak to him to ascertain this information?

  • @TheChessNeck
    @TheChessNeck 2 года назад +255

    It is hard to explain why he is so good. He just is and I don't even think he could fully explain it. Obviously he has studied a lot, but so have the other GMs he destroys lol

    • @FoxenPiano
      @FoxenPiano 2 года назад

      He had the strongest buttplug.

    • @SideStrafed
      @SideStrafed 2 года назад +24

      Not only is his memory for memorizing lines and theory absolute world class but he’s one of the greatest chess tacticians. Being the greatest end game player of all time I think Magnus is so much better because he’s just so exceptionally well rounded. Unlike other GM’s that could rival Magnus in one particular category but can’t compare to him in another.

    • @ShomilSaxena
      @ShomilSaxena 2 года назад +34

      Its not rocket science lol . he isn't the most creative player but likes experimenting, he just plays extremely solid throughout all his games and maintains constant pressure over his opponent's pieces all the time. Ultimately the opponent makes one small slip up and magnus capitalizes on it HARD and staying solid throughout ensures that he can bounce back from the mistakes he himself makes . this is coupled with him playing near perfect endgames like an engine .
      "Extracting water from rock" summarizes Mag pretty much

    • @Obiamajoyisrmd
      @Obiamajoyisrmd 2 года назад +22

      @@ShomilSaxena your explanation didn’t add anything to the conversation.
      “It’s not rocket science”

    • @ShomilSaxena
      @ShomilSaxena 2 года назад +2

      @@Obiamajoyisrmd it literally did but ok

  • @Antmanwald0423
    @Antmanwald0423 2 года назад +56

    Levy blew up so quickly for good reason. I can see these two being friends.

  • @Janet_Airlines802
    @Janet_Airlines802 2 года назад +53

    Levi is really good at explaining complex parts of the game for the average person. He has the best RUclips channel to learn from.

    • @WaveformV1.0
      @WaveformV1.0 2 года назад +5

      His channel is great but I think there are a few more in the best category for learning.

    • @Janet_Airlines802
      @Janet_Airlines802 2 года назад +5

      @@WaveformV1.0 Daniel Noroditsky is great but he talks way to much. I bought his Noroditsky method and I’m having a hard time getting through it. 20 minutes in and barely looked at one single position, but he shows he has a huge vocabulary and used a thesaurus when he was young.

    • @rambo2667
      @rambo2667 2 года назад

      @@Janet_Airlines802 I watched Levy too but he is too basic. What I mean is his analysis is excellent for an average viewer of an average chess players.

    • @melzz
      @melzz Год назад +2

      @@rambo2667 that's why i think levy course is good for beginners

  • @jonathanchristopher1099
    @jonathanchristopher1099 2 года назад +100

    I remember one interview of Magnus (I don't remember with who) when asked how he creates a strategy and he said something to the effect of: It's not so much strategy but when a move "doesn't look right" I somehow try to make my position look right. He also said he doesn't know how he does that, he just is able to when something doesn't look right.

    • @mi_-lt4ws
      @mi_-lt4ws 2 года назад +33

      That’s called intuition

    • @MrPek-fe9fp
      @MrPek-fe9fp 6 месяцев назад

      Intuition and some crazy pattern recognizing​@@mi_-lt4ws

    • @Jathan-z5y
      @Jathan-z5y 5 месяцев назад

      Sounds like he gave a throw off answer.
      If your part of a professional sports team or if your a pro athlete and a reporter asks you what your strategy is going to be in order to win the match.
      Are you going to give them your play book?
      Or would you give them a throw off answer so as to answer their question without answering their question?

    • @AP0PT0SIS
      @AP0PT0SIS 3 дня назад

      @@Jathan-z5yNah it’s his actual biggest strength. The nice thing about being Magnus is that you can tell people what your biggest strength is and your opponents can’t steal your playbook if your playbook is intuition.

  • @noornasri5753
    @noornasri5753 2 года назад +74

    For the memory, a lot of people are assuming he's born with it. This is more from my experience, but I think what we remember shifts based on what we care about, and the way our memory recalls events is very practical in chess. I always joked about having bad memory because I need to write down peoples names and go through them so many times, because unless its someone I actively interact with the memory just escapes me. On the flip side, I can find myself randomly remembering algorithms and solutions I covered half a decade ago when solving certain coding problems. Our brains are incredibly powerful, and I think the best recollection happens through series of linked events. We link a memory to a specific idea, when we encounter a situation that reminds us of that one thing, it'll lead to another until we have the full image in our head. More like a recreation of what actually happened through key events.
    With that, I think for the super GMs who started playing chess as children and developed to truly understand the sport (usually GMs by 15), those games are what's essential in their heads. They don't need to remember the actual boards, just the specific series of moves. The ability to remember thousands of these and be able to recall ones based on similarity seems insane to us, but I think it's all the same idea.

    • @mi_-lt4ws
      @mi_-lt4ws 2 года назад +15

      He was definitely born with it. When he was 5 he could memorise every country, their population and their capitals. Cant teach that

    • @noornasri5753
      @noornasri5753 2 года назад +7

      @@mi_-lt4ws Kids in that age are sponges, they absorb information like crazy. That's how we pick up languages without thinking about it as kids, but struggle to start as adults. I'm sure he was born with a genetic lottery towards chess, but I think people put it all off on that when the biggest factor is definitely his early years (3-5). I wonder how his parents got him so involved before he even understood the world

    • @ade8890
      @ade8890 2 года назад

      @@noornasri5753 Lmao, you haven't been around too many kids if you think that is anything short of pure innate ability. You can have all the passion and hard work in the world, chances are you will never be a GM. Memory chunking has a lot to do with successful chess, and that's an innate ability you're born with. It's not like you can't memory chunk for subjects you aren't interested in, you memory chunk as a core mechanism for conscious thought.
      No matter how long I try to train, I will never be able to play 50 people blind fold and win each with ease....

    • @hansmahr8627
      @hansmahr8627 2 года назад +4

      For a lot of GMs it does develop because of their intense focus on the game from a young age. For Magnus, it's just something that he has always had. It's the same with Kasparov who has an extraordinary memory for all kinds of things. I remember reading once that he doesn't like to talk about it because it makes it seem like he's some kind of freak of nature whose chess genius just comes down to having an almost savant-level memory.

    • @ade8890
      @ade8890 2 года назад +1

      @@hansmahr8627 which sadly seems to be the case. Chess GMs have a memory like NBA players are tall.

  • @stockstuff7259
    @stockstuff7259 2 года назад +35

    Still one of my favorite pod casts and interviewers. The more I watch the more I enjoy and appreciate it . Quickly crawling into my top ten people I'd love to have dinner with and pick their mind. Keep up the great work!

  • @FoieGras
    @FoieGras 2 года назад +35

    Magnus is one of those rare combination of talent, hard work, balance, humility, and activism that comes along only once in a millenium or so. We are lucky to have him IMHO .

  • @user-uk9er5vw4c
    @user-uk9er5vw4c 2 года назад +51

    good to see Levy here, lex has the most interesting guests

  • @Tx66
    @Tx66 2 года назад +9

    Levy did so incredible here, despite being completely sleep deprived probably after all the travel. Also, that shirt is sharper than the Najdorf

  • @loftiswrites
    @loftiswrites 2 года назад +33

    Great collab. Love all the chess love, Lex.

  • @erdavtyan
    @erdavtyan 2 года назад +15

    Lex looks like a rendered character from a game with excellent graphics.

  • @timelapsega
    @timelapsega 2 года назад +38

    Magnus has lived and breathed the game his entire life, it's embedded in his soul. That's why from the start I thought if he felt like something was off against Neimann then it most likely was. He doensn't even have to consciously notice it, he can just feel it.

  • @wettuna1769
    @wettuna1769 11 месяцев назад +3

    The way chess gods talk bout magnus is how melee gods talk about mango

  • @omarihoward8168
    @omarihoward8168 2 года назад +58

    Uh…I just thought it was because he’s named like a f*ckin Bond villain 😂🤣

  • @ra5hid101
    @ra5hid101 2 года назад +10

    What levy meant was that in a complex endgame , the players wont play accurately all the time.

    • @therainman7777
      @therainman7777 7 месяцев назад +2

      I don’t think that’s what he meant actually. He was pretty clear in saying that in certain very complex endgames, Stockfish itself literally doesn’t know which side has the advantage, because the possibilities are too numerous and diverse and Stockfish does not have an unlimited ability to look ahead. His point didn’t really have anything to do with how the players played.

  • @ColemanJRimer
    @ColemanJRimer 2 года назад +11

    Neat to see GothamChess in such a different setting.

  • @georgepatton6029
    @georgepatton6029 Год назад +2

    Ding always goes from down to up, holy fuck that was an accurate call.

  • @YouWin07
    @YouWin07 2 года назад +16

    The major factor Magnus dominated his generation is that he excelled at the most difficult part of the game of chess i. e. the endgame. Historically few players were endgame specialists, like Capablanca, Rubenstein, perhaps Karpov. Because of this he manages to save lost games and win seemingly dead draw games. Added to all that being talented, determined, and has something to prove and wants to leave his stamp on the game.

    • @yeayeawhatevasureokayy
      @yeayeawhatevasureokayy 2 года назад +5

      Can add Smyslov as an endgame virtuoso as well ...but Magnus is the best of them all

    • @YouWin07
      @YouWin07 2 года назад +2

      @@yeayeawhatevasureokayy you're right Smyslov was a great player, and what's also great about him is his uncanny ability of placing his pieces in the optimum squares even in difficult positions, for this reason he was necknamed : "The Hand".

  • @N0G1
    @N0G1 2 года назад +9

    With reference to UFC/BJJ, I'd liken the old school "first to x wins" to sub only matches. Going till no end in sight. Great for the purist, not so great for modern times with TV etc to organise

    • @will224488guy
      @will224488guy 2 года назад

      Having the possibility for 5 fights to take over 5 hours is exhausting. Forget TV that would be a lot in person

  • @snap-off5383
    @snap-off5383 2 года назад +3

    It used to be the opposite: Tony Miles purposefully played bad moves against Karpov early to side-step the World Champion's superior opening memorization and get to having to play chess, and it turned out that Tony won! Now the champion is doing that to the underlings!

  • @EndoftheTownProductions
    @EndoftheTownProductions 9 месяцев назад +3

    0:41 -- What Bobby Fischer was worried about, namely chess becoming all theory and memorization.

  • @wyattearp4055
    @wyattearp4055 2 года назад +16

    We love Levi! Gotham is our chess translator! Thank you for having him on the podcast!

  • @matthewfleischmann3218
    @matthewfleischmann3218 2 года назад +107

    More chess videos, please!

    • @mvubu6823
      @mvubu6823 2 года назад +3

      check

    • @derpy_blue
      @derpy_blue 2 года назад +2

      mate

    • @yousuck6222
      @yousuck6222 2 года назад +1

      Ideally with no adverts, just them off. How much do you make anyway? 2 bucks a video?

    • @BakedNConfused
      @BakedNConfused 2 года назад +1

      This is your only comment on this channel .

  • @Triathlon.
    @Triathlon. 2 года назад +3

    There is always an agreed-upon platform to measure who is the best in a sport. Regardless of monetary compensation. Great point.

  • @imensonspionrona2117
    @imensonspionrona2117 2 года назад +33

    I think the reason why chess is not as popular as it should be, is because it takes a lot of mental constitution to play just one game. I code 24/7 and that is like writing a math paper for 8h every day, but pales in comparison to just one chess game. One complex chess game can drain you completely. Fascinating really.

    • @thicknjuicy1258
      @thicknjuicy1258 2 года назад +2

      Wait you write code and can’t play chess 😂😂 I’m switching up jobs

    • @WTfire10
      @WTfire10 2 года назад +4

      Coding is far easier than chess.

    • @imensonspionrona2117
      @imensonspionrona2117 2 года назад +2

      @@WTfire10 Computers cannot code.

    • @tongpoo8985
      @tongpoo8985 Год назад

      You summed it up. I used to love to play chess to relax, but once I got to the point where I'm obsessively calculating variations and considering positional aspects, it becomes more stressful. I prefer to spend my free time doing something that will recharge my batteries instead of require more mental energy. To get really good as an adult with many responsibilities you gotta be a certain type of person.

    • @tongpoo8985
      @tongpoo8985 Год назад +1

      @@account2198 football actually has quite a barrier to entry in terms of understanding. As far as basic rules football is more complex than chess I'd say (even just in terms of pieces (positions), football has more). This is why its not so popular internationally whereas soccer is (because its the simplest sport possible, you kick the ball in the goal). But in terms of understanding the game once you have the basics, chess of course clears football a thousand times over. Sports are just easier to see the beauty in, football is a very dramatic and cinematic sport. With Chess, to see the drama you need an understanding equal or greater to the players you are watching.

  • @philanthropicnightmare1206
    @philanthropicnightmare1206 2 года назад +33

    Lex, if you're gonna be having all these chess guys on you gotta be playing chess boi

    • @MattMacKinnon
      @MattMacKinnon 2 года назад +2

      He clearly alreqdy does play chess based on the questions he has been asking and his level of understanding.

    • @Pazaluz
      @Pazaluz 2 года назад +1

      @@MattMacKinnon He might mean playing a game with them on the show

    • @MattMacKinnon
      @MattMacKinnon 2 года назад

      @@Pazaluz Maybe.

    • @philanthropicnightmare1206
      @philanthropicnightmare1206 2 года назад +1

      @@MattMacKinnon I believe he used to play as a kid/younger person. I don't think he plays much or maybe at all anymore. "Why Lex Fridman doesn't play chess": ruclips.net/video/ilm_qdPmPYc/видео.html
      but yeah, it would be cool to see him mess around with these chess gods

    • @georgek2092
      @georgek2092 2 года назад +3

      It wouldn't even be competitive. Levy would crush him and massively tilt Lex

  • @NateHaselton
    @NateHaselton 2 года назад +6

    Lex Fridman and Levy Rozman? What day is it? Hell yeah.

  • @N88369
    @N88369 7 месяцев назад +1

    He doesn’t think deeply, he thinks clearly.

  • @kalemperor531
    @kalemperor531 2 года назад +12

    Crazy combo... Thank you guys

  • @TheStringBreaker
    @TheStringBreaker 2 года назад +5

    *Unexpected but welcomed collaboration!*

  • @camerontankersley3184
    @camerontankersley3184 Месяц назад +1

    Lex literally predicted Hikarus entire career

  • @TheMg49
    @TheMg49 2 года назад +4

    Good conversation. Rozman has one of the best RUclips chess channels that I've viewed. Thanks

  • @h0rk3d
    @h0rk3d 2 года назад +9

    Above all, Magnus is creative

  • @dustinmccrindle343
    @dustinmccrindle343 Год назад +1

    All the commentators are Grand Masters...
    Agadmator in the background: "cough, cough".
    Disclaimer: I'm not sure he was commentating on the WC event, but he's been on a lot of top end tournaments.

  • @calcramer
    @calcramer 2 года назад +2

    Nice to see Levy wearing sleeves.

  • @Nonixification
    @Nonixification 2 года назад +25

    3:00 I dont think "Stockfish doesnt know", its just a draw with perfect play. Also tablebase is coming to play at few pieces.

    • @abidulmuhaiminrahbar
      @abidulmuhaiminrahbar 2 года назад +9

      @@crabguy34 you talking alpha zero year or 2 ago? Then stockfish was 8 or something. Now stockfish 17 is way more stronger than alpha zero.

    • @ed1pk
      @ed1pk 2 года назад +3

      @@abidulmuhaiminrahbar You could say the same for a current hypothetical improved version of Alpha Zero or a future version. Point is you never know.

    • @feeadftth
      @feeadftth 2 года назад

      @@abidulmuhaiminrahbar It was Stockfish 13 i think, we're now at 15. Also, AlphaZero had 40 hours against itself, period. It literally started from the rules of the game, no openings, no strategies, it figured it all out by itself in 40 hours. Against a software decades in development.
      AlphaZero with a couple weeks training would wipe the floor with Stockfish for years.

    • @wondays654
      @wondays654 2 года назад +4

      @@feeadftth lol do you even understand the resources that are required to train a neural net in that amount of time. Only companies like google, Amazon or Microsoft can fund the hardware required. Also “couple of weeks of training”, you clearly don’t understand how neural network works. Longer training time does not equal better performance. Leela uses the exact same principle as alpha zero and hasn’t made a super linear improvement in strength. Current stockfish is simply stronger than alpha zero. If you doubt me put any of the positions that stockfish 8 failed and stockfish 15 sees it all. To put it in perspective stockfish 12 has a higher win % against stockfish 8 than alpha zero did.

    • @FreemanWelterweight
      @FreemanWelterweight 2 года назад

      @@wondays654 it's fascinating how people can put this much energy into dick riding a chess engine lol.
      And I always wonder why they hate Stockfish so much.

  • @High_Rate136
    @High_Rate136 2 года назад +1

    Nice shirt choice for Levy. Works well with the background

  • @user-xc5xf9qg1j
    @user-xc5xf9qg1j 10 месяцев назад +2

    I strive to find a wife in life that will be as excited when talking about our child as Levy is when talking about Magnus

  • @awesomeleozejia8098
    @awesomeleozejia8098 2 года назад +1

    Now that’s a collab I wouldn’t have expected

  • @Fisj
    @Fisj Год назад +1

    The memory is part what makes him good. Interesting that Danaher says the same about what makes Gordon Ryan good in bjj

  • @scottrobinson4611
    @scottrobinson4611 2 года назад +7

    For Magnus choosing not to defend his title - I have a few thoughts.
    1. If I've been world champion for almost a decade like Magnus has, I could see it losing the magic.
    When he was a teenager, he had a lot to prove. Winning the WC is the biggest single achievement in chess.
    After almost 10 years at the top with little by means of real competition, it makes sense that Magnus has stopped seeing the appeal.
    2. Following on from my first point. Every 2 years Magnus has had to devote a bunch of time, effort and money to prepare for the championship, and has won convincingly every time.
    It's a lot of sacrifice for something that's losing its appeal to Magnus, and that he already knows the outcome of. Eventually the cons will outweigh the pros.
    3. Again following on from the previous points...
    Magnus knows he's the best by a considerable margin. Of course he has to put in the work because chess is a game that is always developing. You have to keep learning to stay at the top. If Ian had 3 months to prepare and Magnus did not, Ian would have the advantage - but Magnus knows that with a similar level of effort in preparation to his opponent, he will always beat his opponent in the WC format.
    Magnus even gave us a hint himself, when he said he would only defend his title if Alireza won the candidates. This shows that Magnus does not see the value in playing against a 'known quantity' in the usual super-GMs, but he would give it a shot for the latest prodigy who has made rapid progress, and may surprise Magnus with a suitably prodigious performance.
    I can see how Magnus might view such a WC match against Alireza as similar to his own inaugural WC match against Anand.
    Alireza crumbled in the candidates, so Magnus chose not to defend his title against a more predictable opponent.

  • @rajeshkumarmohanta111
    @rajeshkumarmohanta111 2 года назад +28

    I like how levy deliberately speaking slow.... that must have been painful 😆

    • @Alex_agamer
      @Alex_agamer 2 года назад +6

      Hes taking his time to fully word his thoughts and i dont mind since its one of the best explanations ive heard in a while

    • @Fergus316
      @Fergus316 2 года назад +3

      He didn't have to be "on" for this interview

  • @HollowRosario
    @HollowRosario 2 года назад +22

    So glad you had Gotham on! Chess needs more love and he’s great for chess

  • @ClarkPotter
    @ClarkPotter 2 года назад +8

    Levy isn't correct that Stockfish doesn't know. It does. HUMANS don't know every possibility is all and some sub-trees are more treacherous (from a human practical perspective) than others.
    Stockfish also has 7-piece endgame tablebases. Any node within its search that reaches it, it knows perfectly, including every move within in perfectly. If it's showing zeros, either it KNOWS how to force a draw, or all of the characteristics of the pros and cons for either side, in its estimation, completely cancel out for the moment.

    • @schroederluck7984
      @schroederluck7984 2 года назад +1

      Yeah I'm kinda surprised Levy didn't know this. And if he did know this, he definitely didn't do a good job of sharing it lol. I kept waiting for him to offer the correct explanation and he just never quite got there.

    • @h.h.h.9307
      @h.h.h.9307 2 года назад

      Hes an IM which is the second highest titel in the world, so he does know how Stockfish works buddy. But he wants his explanations to be understandable by somebody who has never played chess.

  • @benjaminrichard7741
    @benjaminrichard7741 2 года назад +3

    9:33 Yes great example here with GSP and Khabib ❤

  • @Trizzer89
    @Trizzer89 2 года назад +5

    Carlsen is good at chess because he is the best at endgames. Endgames are extremely complicated and even Carlsen makes mistakes, but other people make more

  • @Niqqo
    @Niqqo 2 года назад +4

    Great talk Levy, amazing to listen to!

  • @alexjbriiones
    @alexjbriiones 2 года назад +14

    Carlsen has special abilities, one of them is synesthesia, and arguably can enhance his intuitive and perceptive ability to see patterns where others cannot. But his super ability is his memory. Also, like Bobby Fisher, he is hyper-competitive.

  • @zadeh79
    @zadeh79 Год назад +1

    He has a prodigious long-term memory (associative memory). He can match patterns from games he played years ago.

  • @MrSpeedyAce
    @MrSpeedyAce 2 года назад +1

    Lex looks like the chillest vampire giving an interview lol

  • @GetOffTheLawn
    @GetOffTheLawn 3 месяца назад +5

    It's simple really. Magnus is bored. The whole thing bores him. It's too easy for him.

  • @jasonthomas6651
    @jasonthomas6651 2 года назад

    No mention or acknowledgment of his computation skill? End games are not random memorization....

  • @yak2538
    @yak2538 2 года назад +6

    one of my fav guests. thanks lex

  • @VincesInHocSigno
    @VincesInHocSigno 2 года назад +1

    Wait... You're saying Bach was more interested in the math than the sheer beauty of his music? 8:31

    • @cocopopsbrahhh
      @cocopopsbrahhh 3 месяца назад

      literally the stupidest thing i’ve ever heard, imagine saying something that wrong that confidently…

    • @VincesInHocSigno
      @VincesInHocSigno 3 месяца назад

      Literally? 😂​@@cocopopsbrahhh

    • @cocopopsbrahhh
      @cocopopsbrahhh 3 месяца назад

      @@VincesInHocSigno I mean yeah he’s just totally wrong, don’t you agree?

    • @slimjim5392
      @slimjim5392 3 дня назад

      ​@cocopopsbrahhh as a musician, I wouldn't be surprised if that was accurate. Math in music is hella interesting.

  • @websnarf
    @websnarf 5 месяцев назад

    So weird, that IM Rozman misunderstood what happened in Game 6 of Carlsen - Nepo.
    When Stockfish was showing 0.00 as the evaluation, in that game it was because it had accessed the "perfect endgame tables" that it has access to, and the true evaluation of the position was a forced draw. The problem was that it was a 6-piece endgame that is too complicated for humans to play perfectly. The tables show how to do it, but there is no simple way of distilling the strategy down to a human expressible set of ideas that a player can execute to force the draw. So Carlsen and Nepo were still playing chess like they normally do, regardless of the true evaluation of the position. The commentators (even top GMs, and former world champions) couldn't say anything meaningful at that stage of the game because the computers had nothing to say other than "this position is a draw with perfect play" without an explanation of how or why. The other point is that Carlsen was digging very deep -- deeper than any player watching or commentating on the game and found a strategy for *trying* to win. When Nepo made the crucial error that let the draw slip through his finger, none of Carlsen, Nepo, or the commentators had any idea, at the time, that Nepo still had a way to save the game and how to do it except for the computer telling the commentators the exact move. It was examined afterwards, and the best people came up with, was the once Carlsen started pushing his pawns, Nepo needed to shift his Queen to the other side of the board to optimally slow down Carlsen's pawns, but he failed to do so in time.
    Carlsen demonstrated that he was deeper and better than anyone else, and that he could find ideas, even ideas that technically don't work in theory but nevertheless do work in practice, at a much more prodigious rate than any human alive.

  • @Obiamajoyisrmd
    @Obiamajoyisrmd 2 года назад +20

    Levy - very good explanation. You are an ambassador for the game

    • @wooshbait36
      @wooshbait36 2 года назад

      No, Xqc is ambassador of chess because he put chess on the map and he made it popular, nobody knew or cared about chess before twitch streamer xQc

    • @StrikeWarlock
      @StrikeWarlock 2 года назад

      @@wooshbait36 the guy that got smoked by Charlie? LMAAAO

  • @Zenthex
    @Zenthex 2 года назад +1

    magnus really is an intuitive player and i can see why a guy like that wouldn't want games that are still in theory after 30 moves.

  • @tan.nicolas
    @tan.nicolas 2 года назад +6

    Lex podcast is just superb!!

  • @longviolinfilms
    @longviolinfilms 2 года назад +2

    Two of my favorite personalities that seem so different until they come together and totally hit it off. I can see the beauty in that because Im romantic

  • @CrazyzzzDudezzz
    @CrazyzzzDudezzz 2 года назад

    Carlsen looks at the board and sees it in 3D

  • @VARMOT123
    @VARMOT123 2 года назад +3

    chess is the only sport/game where some commentators and chess influencers earn more than many top 50ers .this happens because you don't need to watch players but need to look at the chess position live which is free on websites so players can't monetize that viewership to the best extent. ridiculous lol

  • @VARMOT123
    @VARMOT123 2 года назад +2

    that was a table base draw

  • @matthewviramontes3131
    @matthewviramontes3131 2 года назад +9

    Yea memory is absolutely fundamental. Imagine you were able to play some 40 *million* games like Alpha Zero did. At some point it wouldn't matter for you though, because it'd be impossible to remember even a significant portion of those games. However, Alpha Zero or any computer could have a detailed database for every single move made in every one of those games, and use it for reference. Now scale that down, say Magnus has played or looked at 100,000 games in his life, but his exceptional memory allows him to remember a significant portion of those games. Whereas me for example, I could play the exact same amount of games, but not even remember half of them. Then of course there's the ability to calculate variations, which Magnus is also able to do well. Very well.

    • @basbakker8843
      @basbakker8843 2 года назад +2

      exactly. memory is nr.1. creativity is lower down the list like bobby fisher said

  • @TheDylls
    @TheDylls 2 года назад

    0:40 Was it Twain who said "First learn the facts, then distort them to your leisure"

  • @prawtism
    @prawtism 2 года назад +1

    He can call himself WC until Nepo wins the title

  • @dylanmasterguy
    @dylanmasterguy 5 месяцев назад

    its like in the ufc when they give bonuses so the fighters are more aggressive. give incentives to olay more aggressive. like if you win so and so amount of games you get a bonus as well 👀

  • @abdosoliman
    @abdosoliman 2 года назад +3

    Is this two of my best RUclipsr across the table I want more of that please

  • @SicFromTheKush
    @SicFromTheKush 6 месяцев назад

    He signs everything "world chess champion" because there's 2000 people with the same name

  • @papamurrth1
    @papamurrth1 2 года назад +3

    Didn't expect Levy, couldn't be happier though!

  • @alvinalcala6104
    @alvinalcala6104 2 года назад +2

    Magnus Carlsen is the modern day Emmanuel Lasker! he treat chess as a sport and relies heavily on practical play rather than chess theory.

  • @luckyno888
    @luckyno888 2 года назад +1

    Magnus: It is better to be human.

  • @MTB8896
    @MTB8896 2 года назад

    Me, using hints and assistance against Jimmy: Yes, yes, of course.

  • @xerowon3490
    @xerowon3490 Год назад

    I know nothing about this Lex guy, 15 minute interview and I still know nothing about him he didn't talk about himself at all....FANTASTIC interviewer snd great voice. I like this guy im gonna check out more

  • @travisphilp8215
    @travisphilp8215 2 года назад +1

    Awesome feature! Love both your guys work 👏🏽

  • @bobbyknuckles6380
    @bobbyknuckles6380 2 года назад +1

    6:36 There’s that Joe Rogan and UFC influence, lol. “Who ya got?”

  • @sadiem6758
    @sadiem6758 2 года назад +1

    Whooo happy to see this collaboration!

  • @kaihammon7321
    @kaihammon7321 2 года назад +1

    The title is earned. That’s why he uses it. For the future 🐐

  • @diamondmeeple
    @diamondmeeple 4 месяца назад

    Magnus got a chess memory which is second to none. Calling the unreal memory for "intution" is just wrong.

  • @robbie_
    @robbie_ Год назад

    Very good point about the Olympics. I remember 2012 in the UK, which I personally part paid for (it was very expensive and my taxes were used, obviously). It was streamed by the BBC and kept on their website for some short amount of time, then disappeared. So I'm paying the BBC a licence fee per year + I paid for the event with my taxes, and incredibly enough I cannot access any of the content anymore. Money ruins everything doesn't it.

  • @rontomkins6727
    @rontomkins6727 2 года назад +2

    Great podcast Lex! Keep up the good work.

  • @etiennelacroix-videoproduc4382
    @etiennelacroix-videoproduc4382 2 года назад +2

    I also play like that, after 5 moves no more database moves! ;)

  • @quantum_beeb
    @quantum_beeb 2 года назад +1

    I feel like this is a good chance for Ding to take advantage being over the board.

  • @2Good-WatchAgain
    @2Good-WatchAgain 2 года назад +9

    How people can say and actually believe we are all equal is crazy!!! Magnus can literally tell you tye exact game the two chess players and when the game took place just by seeing one picture of how the board was set during match. Crazy

    • @LowbrowDeluxe
      @LowbrowDeluxe 2 года назад +2

      I think that's a huge part of it, to be honest. It feels like several of the other GM/SuperGM have something similar but they remember the games as a series of moves. It's super cool to be able to remember every game they've played/watched as a series of 30-90 moves, and pick out snippets and think 'so I've seen/been in a similar position before and after that it went tick-tick-tick-tick". Like I'd bet 99% of humanity simply couldn't do that. But Magnus remembers each board individually and then each board played after that to I can't even guess how many moves out he can think through like that. Maybe all the way to endgame of any games he's seen. I can't even imagine thinking in that way. The only thing beyond that would be literally being able to replicate a computer's ability to extrapolate out every possible move all the way to end game from every single board.

    • @charlesleitz7549
      @charlesleitz7549 2 года назад +3

      I'm pretty sure that, when people say things like "we're all equal", they don't mean that we're all equally talented at chess (or parkour, or sushi making, or sex, or harpsichord).

    • @qrz_7289
      @qrz_7289 2 года назад

      Because in the end chess is a board game...

  • @pmcate2
    @pmcate2 2 года назад

    I think this is Magnus's way of saying he thinks the rating system is better than the WC title as a measure of who is best the best player.

  • @arunvasudevan3961
    @arunvasudevan3961 Год назад

    Carlsen has the most consistency and persistence, game 6 in 2021 finals vs Nepo is the best example of the difference between Magnus and the rest of the super GM top 10 players.

  • @lukosius68
    @lukosius68 Год назад

    Levy is the kind of person, to allow fried liver attack, only to demolish opponent later on for his own satisfaction

  • @clintoruss153
    @clintoruss153 2 года назад +3

    Magnus is a Complete Genius

  • @tk2070
    @tk2070 2 года назад

    The answer is to look at Wsop the world series of poker. The coveted diamond bracelet... the huge prize purse its insane. Wsop is legendary

  • @ather1276
    @ather1276 2 года назад

    Why would they call him and not Hikaru

  • @gianttigerfilms
    @gianttigerfilms 2 года назад

    Magnus, Levy, Travis Stevens, Jimmy Pedro, Duncan Trussell
    Ty Lex! From a fellow Judoka ameuter chess enthusiast and forever student of life

  • @krisboudreau3475
    @krisboudreau3475 2 года назад +2

    You gotta love Levy