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Lichess - Don't register. Play Chess.

174 points| Uncle_Sam | 15 years ago |lichess.org | reply

56 comments

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[+] _ouxp|15 years ago|reply
Please don't tell me Safari 5 is deprecated and ask me to "upgrade" to Firefox.
[+] mikek|15 years ago|reply
Especially on the iPhone!
[+] j_baker|15 years ago|reply
Look on the bright side. At least the page doesn't say something like "Works best on Internet Explorer 4" (or some other outdated version of IE).
[+] dxq|15 years ago|reply
How to troll online chess:

1. Open up Chess.app

2. Turn CPU difficulty all the way up

3. Start lichess game as black

4. Mirror lichess opponent's moves into Chess.app

5. Mirror Chess.app opponent's moves into lichess

6. Talk incredible amounts of smack

[+] ben0x539|15 years ago|reply
You are watching a stranger play chess against a computer. There has to be a more fulfilling method of trolling people.
[+] dxq|15 years ago|reply
Also, I would like to make a lichess.org bot that plays chess and intelligently talks to opponents.
[+] ern|15 years ago|reply
It's more of a challenge, (and more fun) doing this with a real-life chess game. A friend and I challenged a buddy who was good at chess to a game (2 vs 1), a scenario which he usually defeated us in. I had to leave the room to enter his moves onto my desktop machine. The fun was making up excuses for leaving the room, and transmitting the moves to my partner without making it look suspicious (I pretended to be wired up on caffeine and extremely jumpy). "We" managed to defeat him quickly, but, after seeing how dissapointed he was, spilled the beans.
[+] RoboTeddy|15 years ago|reply
Awesome! I love that Chess 960 (aka Fischer Random) is a prominent choice.

It's a variant of chess where the back rank with all the pieces on it are in a random order (although the board is mirrored, so each side has their pieces in the same order).

My brother is a strong chess player, but eventually gave up the game because to improve he was having to spend more and more time memorizing opening lines. With chess 960 there are 960 different starting positions, so memorization doesn't help at all. I hope it gets more popular, it's a more purely strategic and tactical than standard chess.

[+] mcrittenden|15 years ago|reply
That's really interesting. Do you know of any tournaments or communities that purely play that way? If so, did your brother consider moving to them rather than giving it up altogether? How old was your brother when he quit and how strong is "strong"?
[+] TeMPOraL|15 years ago|reply
I was positively surprised by the fact that the site presented itself in my native language (polish) and it didn't suck. It's probably the first time ever I saw a site that autodetected a language and it actually felt nice. Not everything is translated though, and I hope you'll fix it one day :).
[+] lionhearted|15 years ago|reply
Disappointed. I got paired with a newbie who was screwing around.

http://awesomescreenshot.com/0fa3r9l09

The site, though, is beautiful and a joy to play on. My last online chess was at Yahoo Chess, and this feels like walking on air compared to Y! Chess's clunky interface. Beautiful site, very pleasing to use.

A nice feature to keep semi-serious players around would be some way to get scored or sorted, so you somewhat consistently can get decent matches. Overall I really like it though, cheers.

Edit: Got a full game in - http://lichess.org/bsba_b - I was black. Made some mistakes, I'm rusty. But the interface is really a joy, I like it a lot.

[+] rlpb|15 years ago|reply
Could this be the reason that registration would be a better idea, and thus explain the success of all the chess servers that require it? I'd much prefer to play against an evenly matched opponent, or with a stronger player who I can learn from by analysing the game with afterwards - and definitely against someone who will finish the game. Both of these things requires reputation, and reputation requires registration. I found fics to be great for this.

I apologise to whoever I annoyed by not even playing the first move. I wanted to see if there were _any_ options to discriminate my opponent (for example by supplying my own rating on an honour system); there were none.

[+] levesque|15 years ago|reply
It is nice, I agree that there should be some sort of difficulty level to select. I got paired with someone much better than I and lost pretty quickly. I am not a total newbie, but I'm far from being good :)
[+] Aetius|15 years ago|reply
Yahoo chess still eh? You should try out chesscube. It's much much better.
[+] jensv|15 years ago|reply
Here's a replay of me playing someone who outclasses and outplays me in every way but becomes overconfident and makes a careless mistake that costs him/her the game. I find it amusing because I don't imagine it being common for a weak player to beat a stronger opponent.

http://lichess.org/analyse/pvpxyq

Once again I make no claim on my ability to play the game of chess. (I suck) This was more luck than anything but it's a good example of how you shouldn't give up/become too cocky before crossing the finish line.

[+] iends|15 years ago|reply
fyi, Black is also not a very strong player.
[+] Tycho|15 years ago|reply
It's also usually worth playing for a statemate when you're too far behind... the chances of it happening seem so slim that the opponent just goes into cruise control.
[+] colombian|15 years ago|reply
I've been thinking about doing this for a while. There's so many times when I want to play a game of chess with a friend online, but don't want to take the time to register an account at any of the big chess sites.

My idea would have been a service where you click "New Game", it generates a unique link which you then give to your friend.

Anyways, incredibly well done.

[+] greyman|15 years ago|reply
I still prefer to download a standalone client and connect to FICS and choose time controls, opponents, etc...
[+] dmn001|15 years ago|reply
I prefer FICS too, compared to web alternatives like lichess, you also get a glicko rating, history, win-loss count, lag stats, and you can find a game in an instant, as well as chat functionality and more.

The FICS database of games is also available on: http://www.ficsgames.com/ - currently hosts about 120 million games in its archive.

Best client for FICS is Babaschess - http://www.babaschess.net/default.asp

[+] cicada|15 years ago|reply
This is nice. I was a little saddened that the replay and analyse option after games did not actually analyse games, but with the export I can download the games into my favourite chess engine and have it analyse the games for me.

[edit: noticed that there is a forum, don't go there. While someone occasionally posts an interesting game like http://lichess.org/analyse/0mbole the level of conversation is roughly what you'd expect from a 4chan /chess/ board.]

[+] PostOnce|15 years ago|reply
A Lichess is a female Lich.

How many D&D scenarios have you play a game of chess against a Lich?

Sometimes, I feel it worthwhile to waste karma on these musings. Daydream more often.

[+] flipper|15 years ago|reply
I came in here to make the same point, though I too was pondering the karma hit. Have an upvote.

To drag another tangential fantasy/sci-fi reference into the discussion, in an episode of Blake's 7 Avon and Vila smuggled their supercomputer Orac into a space casino so Vila could play against The Klute, a wizened Davros-like house chess genius with a terrifying laugh. The prize for winning or drawing was 10 million space credits, lose and The Klute could choose your destruction.

Sayonara karma.

[+] discipline|15 years ago|reply
Did the server go down? I want to play against the machine, all I get is a page not found/404 page. I'm on Firefox.
[+] kurumo|15 years ago|reply
Not bad at all as far as interface goes, but their timer is buggy. In 5 0 it ate 15 seconds of my time, apparently due to lag. A thought I had for a while: do analysis on games as they occur and try to estimate opponents' strength, as a way to detect cheating of the type where one of the players mimics a computer. Computationally expensive, but would be fun to try.
[+] arjn|15 years ago|reply
Nice. I like not having to register. Thanks!!
[+] Natsu|15 years ago|reply
Nice, but I hit a bug where the other guy couldn't see my move. We both thought it was the other person's turn :(
[+] zalew|15 years ago|reply
I like it very much, it's fun to use, but do sth with the performance. At the moment "149 connected players" and it's hanging. It's 3rd game in a row for me when it's hanging once a few moves, now it's dead completely. Game over :(
[+] Kilimanjaro|15 years ago|reply
Love it! visuals are nice but can be improved. wooden board, 3D pieces etc.

Before matching players in a random game, ask for a level like novice, intermediate and pro.

I like the chess roulette idea...

[+] ugh|15 years ago|reply
“Visuals are nice but can be improved. wooden board, 3D pieces etc.”

You would call that improved and I would call that tacky.

[+] Natsu|15 years ago|reply
Castling on the queen's side is very clunky. If you move the king two spaces, it should castle for you. It works just fine on the king's side, though.
[+] chrisbroadfoot|15 years ago|reply
I await chessroulette: lichess + video of your opponent.
[+] lazyant|15 years ago|reply
While I was playing I couldn't find the clock
[+] lazyant|15 years ago|reply
OK, I see the clock now but it doesn't work like the traditional one, I played a 5 min "blitz" game and I would have like 5:05, is it using perhaps the Fisher's clock?