Play Chess Against Grandmaster Simulators in Chess DB
I just lost chess to Bobby Fischer three times in a row. Then, to change the pace, I lost to Magnus Carlsen, world champion since 2013. Then I lost to the lowest rated player I could pick, 15-year-old Abhishek K. More than 29,000 people can play chess better than Abhishek. I can not.
The loss in these five games took about twelve minutes. I played them on Chess DB , a site for learning and playing chess. On the site you can play simulators of thousands of players from all over the world. You can also explore your past games and the games others have played on the site and in real matches step by step.
Chess DB can describe your “quality of play” and identify familiar patterns such as general openings or checkmates. It can even help you prepare for games against specific players by analyzing your past games and theirs. I’m not sure how well this works. My style of play is so individual, it is such a game changer, that it remains unclassified. My play quality is “N / A”.
The site has an unpolished old-school interface, but it’s easy enough to delve into its many statistics tools from the homepage, such asuploading and downloading game logs, analyzing any given game position and the odds of winning for each player, several rating calculators, and comparisons of the popularity of different game debuts. for 20 years of playing.
And if you want to play more against Magnus Carlsen, you can try his Play Magnus app for iOS and Android . “Anyone can beat five-year-old Magnus,” the appendix says. And I did! I whipped this five-year plan in the ass! And then he lost to seven-year-old Magnus.