@@IIIPURP73 it tells who is winning If the number is above 1/2 the person is winning if they make right moves If it is above 5, then it is extremely easy + means white is wimming - means black is winning
In the game being reviewed at 17:12 , the 2299 elo opponent, who played as black, proved to be a master of queenside "pawn storming", but he was not a master of 1st and 2nd move opening game theory. A mistake on the 1st two moves by black can allow white to threaten to "transpose" to an opening system that is significantly more unfavorable to black. The game opened with 1. e4 c5 Black's move of c5 on move 1 was premature, and should have been preceded by Nf6. The premature c5 by black opened the door for white to threaten to transpose to the "Ruy Lopez" family of chess openings, with 1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 Such a 2nd move of Nf3 by white would have been somewhat like a normal entry to a Ruy Lopez game. 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Imagine though if after white's 2nd move in a Ruy Lopez opening, some computer hacker then returned back black's e pawn to its starting location, and then moved out black's c pawn to c5. Black would suddenly be in worse shape, since the wrong black pawn would be out. Of course, no hacker is needed if black does it himself with an opening of 1. e4 c5 White merely then needs to add 2. Nf4, with no computer hacker needed, since black did it to himself with a rushed c5 move that was not first preceded by Nf6. Not surprisingly, Stockfish at a depth of 31, when evaluating best moves for white for white's 2nd move with 1. e4 c5, declared 2. Nf3 to be the number 1 choice for white, with an evaluation of +0.29, due to the need for black to evade transpostion to a Ruy Lopez line that is especially bad for black. Even though the Ruy Lopez line was developed some 500 years ago as a counter by white to 1. e4 e5, it can be even more effective as a counter to 1. e5 c5. The key part of a Ruy Lopez attack by white is a move by white on the 3rd turn (or sometimes on the 4th turn) of Bb5 after black moves the d pawn under the right circumstances. The Ruy Lopez family of chess lines is mainly meant to attempt to take early advantage of an absolute pin of a black knight by the white bishop at b5, but can also lead to a materially equal trade of bishops that is positionally unfavorable to black, or can lead to white's b5 bishop later repositioning to a diagonal that will point in the general direction of where the black king is likely to castle. Short version: Black temporarily saved a tempo by not preceding c5 with Nf6, but at the same time risked white taking note of black's shortcut, with white then potentially reacting by partly to almost fully "transposing" to a couple of Ruy Lopez lines that are especially unfavorable to black. In chess, opening lines of play are often over-rated, but at the same time, awareness of an opponent's mistakes made during move 1 or 2 can lead to long term opportunities, by way of making moves that "transpose" or threaten to "transpose" to a different opening line that will be significantly unfavorable to the opponent.
Sicilian is a bad move…because of the ruy Lopez? Uh u clearly have no idea what you’re talking about and probably got an AI to write this for you hoping it would produce something interesting and profound, instead it just name dropped some random openings and slapped them together 😂 the theoretical lines ur referring to aren’t even compatible, it doesn’t even make sense or apply to this.
If white in effect mostly gives you the first move by playing a3 as white's 1st move, a black response of c5 will work great. For the other 19 of white's 20 possible 1st moves in a game of chess, c5 is just an over-rated junk response as a 1st move for black, with one or more better options than c5 out there to choose from. For example, as a response to e5 as a 1st move by white, e6 works well for black, and perhaps e5 as well. With any of the other 18 possible 1st moves for black after a white 1st move of e4, white has somewhere in white's 25 or so possible 2nd moves one or two good counters against black's 1st move. Generically using c5 as the black response to every one of white's possible 20 first moves will mostly just get black in trouble if white chooses wisely from white's set of two dozen or so 2nd move choices, rather than just using the same 2nd move as white over and over and over every time white plays a game of chess.
@@wendydelisse9778 Yeah this is just not true the Sicilian defense is not only one of of not the most popular opening among grandmasters and certainly is among chess engines. It’s hilarious that you mention e6, the french, which is notoriously sketchy for black in both grandmaster and especially chess engine play, make 2 strong engines play and make one of them play the french, watch how it gets slaughtered. Engines LOVE playing against the French. As for E5 it’s extremely extremely hard to prove any kind of advantage at the top level anymore after E4 E5, in human grandmaster play and engine play. And as for amateurs it risks you running into an opening you’re not familiar with at all. At least with the Sicilian, you are somewhat in the driving seat if you know the common variations. Again, you don’t know what you’re talking about Wendy.
I checked what Stockfish 16 would have to say at a depth of 43 with a starting condition of 1. e4, willing to grudgingly concede defeat on the matter of whether a black response of c5 is just a junk response to a white opening of 1. e4. I set Stockfish 16 to show the top 5 results. The top 5 results, in the order given by Stockfish 16, and with the evaluation score given by Stockfish 16, were... 0.00 1. e4 e6 2. d4 d5 3. exd5 +0.13 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 +0.13 1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Nc3 +0.17 1. e4 Nc6 2. Nf3 e5 3. Bb5 +0.17 1. e4 d6 At a depth of 43, a black response of c4 to a white 1st move of e4 came in as just part of the pack of "also rans" that were competing against e6, rather than turning out to be some sort of magic super-opening. Depth 43 is a fairly good predictor of board advantage (with perfect play of course) after 18 pairs of moves, 18 moves by black and 18 moves by white, after whatever starting condition is given to Stockfish 16. 18 + 18 = 36, which is 7 less than the depth of 43 used, since about 7 additional depth is needed to avoid wild false swings in evaluation numbers caused by lengthy exchanges. At lower depths of course, any chess opening could temporarily appear to be a great opening, but at higher depths, the Stockfish 16 evaluation numbers eventually end up closer to where they really belong. Short version: At a Stockfish 16 depth of 43, Stockfish 16 says that a black 1st move of e6 is indeed the best reply by black to a white 1st move of e4. As a response to a white 1st move of e4, a black 1st move of c5 turned out to just be part of the pack of "also rans".
Thanks for the content! Just a quick off-topic question: my SafePal contains some USDT on the Tron network, and I have the seed phrase (mnemonic: unable ostrich finger emerge huge pass exhibit guess forget palm mean away). Could you explain how to move them to Binance?
02:20, isnt e 5 the best move because then you take the knight on c6, check the king and attack the rook and he has to take with knight on e7 and then you could start the attack with the knight on f4
After 2000 improving elo is ridiculously hard… the fact that he got from 2000 to 2300 so quickly is already mind blowing considering he only plays a few games per video, even Gotham is like 2400 to my knowledge
15:09 bishop is not great. And the black queen take the bishop was not even needed as the black queen directly would have took the pawn at c3. It was M2
It's true. If your opponent decide to spend 6 minutes on a move it is their perogative and they can do it if they like. You have no business telling them how to utilise their time.
Thank you so much for this amazing video! Just a quick off-topic question: I have a SafePal wallet with USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (alarm fetch churn bridge exercise tape speak race clerk couch crater letter). How can I transfer them to Binance?
@Emdeezanzi @sadisticTushi When white launched the mating attack, black burned half a minute each on a couple of forced moves. After that, his whole style of play changed out of recognition. Classic cheating pattern.
If anyone's seeing this have an amazing day and God bless you and remember Jesus is King. (Not trying to force anything on anyone but I am Just doing what's right' and spreading the truth). Have an amazing day once again and God bless and remember you are loved
Hey! I was the one who recommended bringing alien gambit this video in your livestream!... Thanks for the quick response unlike the government😀
tf you mean by Govt😂
@@FitSS369bro doesn’t understand
Government doesn’t listen to the publics opinion and do it as fast because the government is always busy
Unlike the government 😂😂
XD
“unlike the government” chatgpt ahhh joke
+5 down to -2 by taking a rook for a Knight is crazy business
What do these number mean (I’m new)
@@IIIPURP73 it tells who is winning
If the number is above 1/2 the person is winning if they make right moves
If it is above 5, then it is extremely easy
+ means white is wimming
- means black is winning
At a GM level even a 0.5 advantage matters
At a normal level, your position is fine huntil it crosses 1
yeah sad life.
Rare non emoji tushi comment sighting?
Bro is 2300 for a 100 years
It hasnt been that many games and hes slowly going up too
Not that easy
Bro is a complefe asshole in the way he speaks about his opponents. Check our NM Nelson Lopez instead, a far nicer man all round.
talking is easy.. stfu whats your rating
😢
In the game being reviewed at 17:12 , the 2299 elo opponent, who played as black, proved to be a master of queenside "pawn storming", but he was not a master of 1st and 2nd move opening game theory. A mistake on the 1st two moves by black can allow white to threaten to "transpose" to an opening system that is significantly more unfavorable to black.
The game opened with
1. e4 c5
Black's move of c5 on move 1 was premature, and should have been preceded by Nf6. The premature c5 by black opened the door for white to threaten to transpose to the "Ruy Lopez" family of chess openings, with
1. e4 c5
2. Nf3
Such a 2nd move of Nf3 by white would have been somewhat like a normal entry to a Ruy Lopez game.
1. e4 e5
2. Nf3
Imagine though if after white's 2nd move in a Ruy Lopez opening, some computer hacker then returned back black's e pawn to its starting location, and then moved out black's c pawn to c5. Black would suddenly be in worse shape, since the wrong black pawn would be out. Of course, no hacker is needed if black does it himself with an opening of
1. e4 c5
White merely then needs to add 2. Nf4, with no computer hacker needed, since black did it to himself with a rushed c5 move that was not first preceded by Nf6.
Not surprisingly, Stockfish at a depth of 31, when evaluating best moves for white for white's 2nd move with
1. e4 c5,
declared 2. Nf3 to be the number 1 choice for white, with an evaluation of +0.29, due to the need for black to evade transpostion to a Ruy Lopez line that is especially bad for black. Even though the Ruy Lopez line was developed some 500 years ago as a counter by white to 1. e4 e5, it can be even more effective as a counter to 1. e5 c5. The key part of a Ruy Lopez attack by white is a move by white on the 3rd turn (or sometimes on the 4th turn) of Bb5 after black moves the d pawn under the right circumstances.
The Ruy Lopez family of chess lines is mainly meant to attempt to take early advantage of an absolute pin of a black knight by the white bishop at b5, but can also lead to a materially equal trade of bishops that is positionally unfavorable to black, or can lead to white's b5 bishop later repositioning to a diagonal that will point in the general direction of where the black king is likely to castle.
Short version: Black temporarily saved a tempo by not preceding c5 with Nf6, but at the same time risked white taking note of black's shortcut, with white then potentially reacting by partly to almost fully "transposing" to a couple of Ruy Lopez lines that are especially unfavorable to black.
In chess, opening lines of play are often over-rated, but at the same time, awareness of an opponent's mistakes made during move 1 or 2 can lead to long term opportunities, by way of making moves that "transpose" or threaten to "transpose" to a different opening line that will be significantly unfavorable to the opponent.
Sicilian is a bad move…because of the ruy Lopez? Uh u clearly have no idea what you’re talking about and probably got an AI to write this for you hoping it would produce something interesting and profound, instead it just name dropped some random openings and slapped them together 😂 the theoretical lines ur referring to aren’t even compatible, it doesn’t even make sense or apply to this.
If white in effect mostly gives you the first move by playing a3 as white's 1st move, a black response of c5 will work great.
For the other 19 of white's 20 possible 1st moves in a game of chess, c5 is just an over-rated junk response as a 1st move for black, with one or more better options than c5 out there to choose from. For example, as a response to e5 as a 1st move by white, e6 works well for black, and perhaps e5 as well. With any of the other 18 possible 1st moves for black after a white 1st move of e4, white has somewhere in white's 25 or so possible 2nd moves one or two good counters against black's 1st move. Generically using c5 as the black response to every one of white's possible 20 first moves will mostly just get black in trouble if white chooses wisely from white's set of two dozen or so 2nd move choices, rather than just using the same 2nd move as white over and over and over every time white plays a game of chess.
👍
@@wendydelisse9778 Yeah this is just not true the Sicilian defense is not only one of of not the most popular opening among grandmasters and certainly is among chess engines. It’s hilarious that you mention e6, the french, which is notoriously sketchy for black in both grandmaster and especially chess engine play, make 2 strong engines play and make one of them play the french, watch how it gets slaughtered. Engines LOVE playing against the French. As for E5 it’s extremely extremely hard to prove any kind of advantage at the top level anymore after E4 E5, in human grandmaster play and engine play. And as for amateurs it risks you running into an opening you’re not familiar with at all. At least with the Sicilian, you are somewhat in the driving seat if you know the common variations. Again, you don’t know what you’re talking about Wendy.
I checked what Stockfish 16 would have to say at a depth of 43 with a starting condition of 1. e4, willing to grudgingly concede defeat on the matter of whether a black response of c5 is just a junk response to a white opening of 1. e4. I set Stockfish 16 to show the top 5 results.
The top 5 results, in the order given by Stockfish 16, and with the evaluation score given by Stockfish 16, were...
0.00 1. e4 e6 2. d4 d5 3. exd5
+0.13 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5
+0.13 1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Nc3
+0.17 1. e4 Nc6 2. Nf3 e5 3. Bb5
+0.17 1. e4 d6
At a depth of 43, a black response of c4 to a white 1st move of e4 came in as just part of the pack of "also rans" that were competing against e6, rather than turning out to be some sort of magic super-opening.
Depth 43 is a fairly good predictor of board advantage (with perfect play of course) after 18 pairs of moves, 18 moves by black and 18 moves by white, after whatever starting condition is given to Stockfish 16. 18 + 18 = 36, which is 7 less than the depth of 43 used, since about 7 additional depth is needed to avoid wild false swings in evaluation numbers caused by lengthy exchanges.
At lower depths of course, any chess opening could temporarily appear to be a great opening, but at higher depths, the Stockfish 16 evaluation numbers eventually end up closer to where they really belong.
Short version: At a Stockfish 16 depth of 43, Stockfish 16 says that a black 1st move of e6 is indeed the best reply by black to a white 1st move of e4. As a response to a white 1st move of e4, a black 1st move of c5 turned out to just be part of the pack of "also rans".
26:41 mate the kiddo!!💀☠
💀
The rook tomato is definitely some fishy business
🍅
Man great games as usual. Next to watching your videos, any sources on the closed Sicilian you can recommend ? I really like that line.
For White: ruclips.net/video/v5Iy7eP1kl0/видео.html
For Black: ruclips.net/video/evXizEzOzic/видео.html
Thanks for the content! Just a quick off-topic question: my SafePal contains some USDT on the Tron network, and I have the seed phrase (mnemonic: unable ostrich finger emerge huge pass exhibit guess forget palm mean away). Could you explain how to move them to Binance?
❤️
Pony got caught taking rookie cookies from the jar
Hahahahah
😯
"Resign is the best move" are you sure about that🤨
En passant 🗿
🙂
02:20, isnt e 5 the best move because then you take the knight on c6, check the king and attack the rook and he has to take with knight on e7 and then you could start the attack with the knight on f4
Yes a solid plan. 👍
32:04 "Fish doesn't understand. Its cutting edge technology" 😂
🙂
Plz make a video playing the sicilian defense only for black
👍
Which app is this ?? In which he is playing the chess ?? Pls confirm someone
Yahoochess
@ Thanx dude.
off beat commentary style love it.
❤️
9:23 Verbal Blunder 😂
😯
Bob the builder playes silly diffence 😆😆
😂😂
🙂
Sadistic Tulsi ❤
❤
"yeah, resign is the best move" 😭😂😂
🙂
Should you have sacrificed the queen?
when?
@sadisticTushi you briefly mentioned sacrifices after black played pawn to B3.
Are you ever gonna get 2400
If you keep this up you won't be able to beat the hikaru kid
After 2000 improving elo is ridiculously hard… the fact that he got from 2000 to 2300 so quickly is already mind blowing considering he only plays a few games per video, even Gotham is like 2400 to my knowledge
@@TheCyanKillerI don’t think Gotham plays rapid
@@TheCyanKillerhe got from 2000 to 2300 because he was already 2300 level.
🤔
31:40 resign is the best move... :)
🙂
15:09 bishop is not great. And the black queen take the bishop was not even needed as the black queen directly would have took the pawn at c3. It was M2
It's pinned
Yes now I see it, sorry, my fault@@sadisticTushi
23:09 as long as we WHAT???
😂 as long as we pee on the kid.
💀
First game was the Saddest Panda I have ever seen 🐼
🐼
31:42 Resign is the best move!
🙂
3:03 let people think, it's their time not yours 😭🙏
Bro i chuckled
It's true. If your opponent decide to spend 6 minutes on a move it is their perogative and they can do it if they like. You have no business telling them how to utilise their time.
😯
Thank you so much for this amazing video! Just a quick off-topic question: I have a SafePal wallet with USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (alarm fetch churn bridge exercise tape speak race clerk couch crater letter). How can I transfer them to Binance?
❤️
I Kinda wanna see hikaru adopt this guy, like sign his adoption paper 😅
💀
1:05 : Chickens quack?
Yes
We need a guide, im spilling the ketchup everytime
Maybe this helps.
Chess Rating Climb: ruclips.net/p/PLf5T-au8Lb20Oxf9fl4wTgDrp1gcOg8OA
23:06
🙂
Why you play only 3 games in every video
idk
@@sadisticTushi 😢
Bro the god of alien gambit is wittyalien
Yeah
True
i’m here for the chess dummies 😂
🙂
6:06 😝😂
😯
The GAMBITPanda
😯
love from Pakistan 🇵🇰❤️🇮🇳
❤️
I’m back too
👍
Why not take b2 at 14.52
Queen C3 would be next
Qc3 and bye bye chicken
Rookie cookie
🍪
Lol chu actually got checkmated after all that hype trash talk
😯
@sadisticTushi hey bro, sorry for the rude comment :(.
The first game, the opponent was cheating lmao
@Emdeezanzi @sadisticTushi When white launched the mating attack, black burned half a minute each on a couple of forced moves. After that, his whole style of play changed out of recognition. Classic cheating pattern.
😯
@@Emdeezanzi @sadisticTushi A counterargument could be that the game simply pivoted on White's blunder but I'm not buying it.
@@Cerezinho yeah, he definitely cheated.
16:32 🤨
🤨
👽👍
👍
2300 to 2400 feels like decades
Yep
Qna
😯
❤
❤️
If anyone's seeing this have an amazing day and God bless you and remember Jesus is King. (Not trying to force anything on anyone but I am Just doing what's right' and spreading the truth). Have an amazing day once again and God bless and remember you are loved
Believe in truth. Believe in science
👍
1min, 9 Views bro fell off
NPC
@@froggy41046 And so are you, because what does your comment accomplish? Nothing.
@@hypercubemaster2729npc
😢
Bro you just liked my previous comments thanxx bro ❤😂😂
❤️
Why do you say kiddo like they're weak haha? At least not in chess. ;)
For fun
"As long as b p p on the kiddie, we're happy." Bro's chess mentor is R-kelly
🙂
1sttt
stop ittttt
@@Adamiscrackedmyguy get some help😃
Lol
👍
@@sadisticTushi you're letting the giga dummy spill the tomato ketchup everywhere?