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World Chess Championship matches have not had an on-board checkmate since 1929

9 points| haunter | 4 hours ago |en.wikipedia.org

9 comments

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haunter|3 hours ago

mhitza|2 hours ago

> Due to an overwhelming amount of malicious activity, we are no longer allowing VPN, Tor nodes, proxies.

I wonder what kind of malicious activity could be targetting that website?! Run of the mill scans?

FrankWilhoit|3 hours ago

How would the game change if resignation were banned? (Retaining the special case for looping endings, of course.)

Someone|2 hours ago

A player who realized they’ve lost would play a few really bad moves (e.g. giving check by moving their queen next to the enemy king, forcing their opponent to take the queen) and get checkmated in no time.

Their opponent could prolong the game by playing bad moves, too, but why would they? Once their opponent has mentally given up the game, making extra moves isn’t physically or mentally exhausting.

seanhunter|2 hours ago

It would make the game worse for players and spectators.

What would the supposed benefit be?

BTW the “special case for looping endings” I think you’re talking about is to do with drawing by 3-fold repetition or the 50 move rule.

munchler|3 hours ago

It would be more boring to watch at the end, and frustrating for the loser to be forced to play a losing position.

u1hcw9nx|3 hours ago

Q: Has there been many World Chess Championship matches with premature resignation?

duskwuff|37 minutes ago

"Premature" is subjective, especially in high-level play.