-
6 votes
-
Ding Liren wins 2023 FIDE World Championship in rapid tiebreak
5 votes -
Magic publishers sent Pinkerton agents to a YouTuber’s house to retrieve leaked cards
22 votes -
World Chess Championship game 8: More drama, Ding Liren misses big chance
3 votes -
Kenyan player expelled after pretending to be a woman to win lucrative prize
7 votes -
World Chess Championship 2023 thread - Ian Nepomniachtchi vs Ding Liren
Anyone else following the world chess championship? Background info (feel free to skip if you're already familiar with this): After reigning champion and world #1 Magnus Carlsen declined to defend...
Anyone else following the world chess championship?
Background info (feel free to skip if you're already familiar with this):
After reigning champion and world #1 Magnus Carlsen declined to defend his title, the winner of the Candidates tournament 2022, Russia's Ian Nepomniachtchi (world #2), faces the second place finisher in the Candidates, China's Ding Liren (world #3). The championship match takes place over 14 games from April 9-April 30 in Astana, Kazakhstan. As of today, April 13, the score is even at 2-2 after 4 games.
Ian Nepomniachtchi (aka "Nepo") won the Candidates tournament in 2020-21, which was split in two due to covid. He proceeded to challenge Magnus Carlsen for the title in late 2021. Both players performed with computer-like precision for the first five games. Game six became the turning point, when Nepo made a serious blunder which allowed Carlsen to eventually convert the game to a win in what would turn out to be the longest game in world championship history, lasting more than 7 hours and 136 moves. After this grueling loss, Nepo's play seemingly collapsed, allowing Carlsen to take a comfortable win with games to spare.
However, Nepomniachtchi would bounce back to win his second Candidates tournament in a row in 2022. When it became clear that Carlsen would not defend his title, the runner-up of that tournament, Ding Liren, became the second player to compete for the title.
Ding has been a top 5 player for years, with 2018-2019 being his best period yet, when he reached world #2 with well over 2800 Elo, and was undefeated for 100 games of classical chess. This is his first appearance in a world championship final, and also a first for China as a nation.
Russia, of course, has a long history of world champions, dominating the chess world for most of the 20th century. Nepomniachtchi, who is a critic of the invasion of Ukraine, competes under a neutral FIDE flag in this match.
This is only the third time the reigning champion has not defended his title since the first world championship in 1886. Bobby Fischer famously disagreed with the match regulations proposed by FIDE, chess' international governing body, and refused to defend his title in 1975. He subsequently retired from competitive chess and didn't re-emerge until the 1990s. The other instance was Alekhine in 1948 -- he had died two years earlier. (There was also a time in the 1990s when the reigning champion, Garry Kasparov, broke with FIDE and organized his own world championship, but I won't get into that complicated story here.) This is the first time a world champion has continued to play competitive chess while refusing to defend their title.
Nepomniachtchi comes into the match ranked as the world #2 (2795 Elo) while Ding is #3 (2788). The abdicated king of chess, Magnus Carlsen, remains #1 (2853).
How to watch
If you want to watch live, the time zone is a bit unfavorable to European and American viewers, as the games start at 3PM Astana time (11 AM Central European summer time, 2 AM Pacific). You can follow the games without commentary here: lichess chess24 chess.com. There's several streams with grandmaster commentary available. FIDE has an official broadcast, but my favorite is chess.com's coverage, which features commentary by GMs Anish Giri, Daniel Naroditsky and David Howell.
For live computer analysis that's stronger than what you can (likely) get from running a local instance of Stockfish on your own computer, check out Sesse (which is just Stockfish running on a decently beefy server setup).
If you want shorter after-the-fact recaps, there are several Youtube channels catering to differing levels of chess skill, including:
- Powerplaychess (GM Daniel King)
- FIDE (GM Daniil Dubov)
- Gothamchess (IM Levy Rozman)
- Agadmator
- Chessnetwork
And probably at least a half-dozen more.
Who's your favorite to win it all? Does the fact that the clearly best player in the world refused to compete make the whole thing uninteresting to you? Will Nepo crumble again like he did against Carlsen, or will Ding's inexperience with world championship matches be his undoing?
6 votes -
Turning ChatGPT into a DM?
14 votes -
Warhammer 40k: 10th edition | Cinematic trailer
3 votes -
Man beats machine at Go in human victory over AI
8 votes -
Mathematics and chess
3 votes -
Wizards of the Coast releases SRD under Creative Commons license
14 votes -
Dungeons & Dragons’ new license tightens its grip on competition
28 votes -
Chess's cheating scandal has taken another bizarre twist – Hans Niemann accuses Magnus Carlsen of paying fellow chess player €300 to shout abuse
6 votes -
Magnus Carlsen claimed his fourth world rapid chess crown and finished with a commanding score of 10/13 in the 2022 FIDE World Rapid Chess Championship
9 votes -
After playing without a hijab in a world championship, Iranian chess star defects to Spain
4 votes -
In 2014 Magnus Carlsen defeated Bill Gates in nine moves on live Norwegian television – analysed
4 votes -
Magnus Carlsen faces his nemesis in final round of Champions Chess Tour 2022 – Poland's Jan-Krzysztof Duda has twice defeated the Norwegian in prestige events
4 votes -
Adversarial policies beat professional-level Go AIs
12 votes -
Organizers of this week's World Fischer Random Chess Championship have introduced unprecedented new security measures to prevent cheating
3 votes -
Hans Niemann sues champion Magnus Carlsen and others for $100 million over cheating claim
14 votes -
Magnus Carlsen withdraws from Sinquefield Cup
24 votes -
How Pokemon cards are made: from start to finish
4 votes -
The quest to save KeyForge, the first procedurally generated collectible card game
4 votes -
What are some of your favorite tabletop RPG systems and settings, and what do you love about them?
I'm interested in learning more about this kind of game, so it would be nice to know everyone's favorites!
9 votes -
D&D 6th Edition announced (but they're calling it One D&D for now)
22 votes -
Magnus Carlsen will not defend World Championship title
11 votes -
Ian Nepomniachtchi wins Candidates Tournament with round to spare
5 votes -
Ian Nepomniachtchi on the brink as Alireza Firouzja goes berserk at the Candidates Tournament
6 votes -
Magnus Carlsen wins fifth Norway Chess title – has now won half of the ten editions and the last four in a row
3 votes -
Duck chess
8 votes -
Dungeon ecology
9 votes -
Hikaru Nakamura on the Candidates: 'Am I the oldest player in the field?!'
3 votes -
Magnus Carlsen once again tops the field of this year's Norway Chess tournament – Wang Hao returns from retirement
3 votes -
Dungeons & Dragons’ next anthology is written entirely by Black and Brown authors
12 votes -
FIDE Ethics imposes a six-month ban on Sergey Karjakin
4 votes -
Why did the world’s best chess player go insane?
5 votes -
GM Sergey Karjakin banned from Grand Chess Tour events for his hostile comments on the Ukraine invasion
5 votes -
India bids for the Chess Olympiad 2022
5 votes -
44th Chess Olympiad and FIDE Congress will not take place in Russia
9 votes -
16-year-old Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu beats world chess champion Magnus Carlsen
9 votes -
HACKERS - A print and play card game for four players
7 votes -
Why championship chess sets are so expensive | So Expensive
6 votes -
Playing electric-shock Operation vs an actual doctor
11 votes -
Daniil Dubov forfeits a game after refusing to wear a mask in Tata Steel Chess Tournament
7 votes -
A brilliant year: Alireza Firouzja’s rise to the very top
7 votes -
A biography of Magic Hall of Famer Brian Kibler
8 votes -
17-year-old Nodirbek Abdusattorov becomes youngest world rapid chess winner
5 votes -
Gifts Ungiven and MTG Hall of Famer Frank Karsten
3 votes -
Magnus Carlsen wrote a blog post about the World Championship
3 votes -
Cockatrice: A cross-platform virtual tabletop for multiplayer card games
5 votes