700 elo took me 4 months to get through, i got to 900 in a week after hitting 800. 700 elos really are just cracked. i swear at least 60% of the games they play above a 1200 elo level
Same dude, identical story lol. I was bouncing around 650-750 ELO for a month, then busted through to 850 winning 27 of my most recent 30. I've improved a bit through that time, though it's the strangest thing!
Yesterday I played so many games where my opponents didn't take my queen that was captured and doesn't have space to run away I'm so bad at tactical and strategy in this game I just saw some opponents mistake and took advantage of it and that's it. I'm just a chill guy
You are my favorite chess player GM Hikaru! Your style of play is amazing and you will always be the fastest chess player in the world (at least for me). Greetings from Venezuela by the way!🇻🇪♟️👋🏼 I'm a newbie at chess but you know what they say "practice makes perfect" :v ⚡
As a new player (rapid elo 1000), i always learn something from your videos. But as an educational video, it would be a lot better without the off-topic chatting.
Naka should keep the doors opened with Freestyle and Ian Buetner's sponsorships! Be in good terms with them! There is good money in that! What's the problem with the name??? Fisher Random, Chess960, Freestyle ...
You know what I hate when I play like 600 they play like pros making all there moves almost the best moves but when you play 600s they do a4 or some random move smh
Creating a queen sacrifice that leads to a position where you regain the material after more than 30 moves and reach a winning position is definitely an interesting challenge! This concept touches on both positional chess and tactical sacrifice, which are essential elements in high-level play. Here's how we can break it down: Concept and Structure The goal of the puzzle is to create a situation where: The queen sacrifice is justified: The sacrifice must lead to a positional advantage (e.g., more active pieces, control of key squares, or long-term strategic pressure), even though you're down material. Material is regained gradually: The queen is not immediately regained but is instead compensated with dynamic factors like piece activity, pawn structure, or positional dominance. This means the compensation comes in small steps, building up over time. After regaining the material (30+ moves later), you transition into a winning position through superior endgame or tactical play, exploiting weaknesses in the opponent’s position. Example Puzzle Setup (Hypothetical Game) Below is a conceptual outline for such a game. To make it interesting and consistent with your request, I'll create a game where White sacrifices the queen and, after 30+ moves, is able to dominate the position through superior piece activity and long-term strategy. Let’s assume White is down a queen and needs to carefully maneuver for compensation. We’ll look at the opening sacrifice and its gradual recovery. Starting Position: The Queen Sacrifice (White sacrifices the Queen) e4 e5 Nf3 Nc6 Bb5 a6 Bxc6 bxc6 (Now White sacrifices the Queen) d3 d6 O-O Bg4 h3 Bh5 c4 c5 (White starts to build a pawn majority and maneuver) Nc3 Nf6 Ne2 Be7 Ng3 Bg6 (White starts to reorganize pieces) Be3 O-O Qd2 a5 a3 Qd7 (Both sides are developing; White’s sacrifice has not yet been compensated) This is the point at which White is down a queen but is building a solid foundation for counterplay. White has a strong pawn center and more active pieces, while Black has the material advantage. Gradual Recovery (Over the Next 30+ Moves) b3 (Preparing to expand on the queenside) Rac1 (Placing a rook on an open file) Rfd1 (Increasing pressure on the d-file) Qe2 (Centralizing the queen, maybe eyeing a future attack) Nf5 (Attacking the weak g7 pawn, gaining a tempo) Qd2 (Bringing the queen back into play) Rg1 (Preparation for kingside attack) Key Points of Positional Play During This Phase: White's compensation: White is slowly regaining material through tactical threats (like the weak g7 pawn) or strategic maneuvering (e.g., opening files and diagonal control). Black’s weaknesses: Black has weaknesses in pawn structure and piece coordination (e.g., passive rooks or weak squares), which White can exploit over time. Tactical threats: White might threaten forks, discovered attacks, or piece activity that compensates for the missing queen. Over time, the combined pressure of piece activity, open files, and weak squares can lead to material regain. Final Recovery and Winning Position After around 30 moves, the game would look something like this: c4 (White opens up the center, further increasing the activity) Rc1 (Bringing all pieces to bear on Black's queenside weakness) Qd2 (Rooks doubled on the d-file, targeting Black’s weak pawn structure) Nxe7+ (Finally, White regains a piece, with a potential winning position) Qxe7 Re1 (White now has a dominant rook, dominating the open files) Qd1+ Qxd1 (Rooks are traded) Nf5+ (Forking pieces, gaining further material) Now, White has regained material and is clearly winning through superior activity, piece coordination, and dominating the open files. The loss of the queen was compensated for gradually, and the final result is a winning position through accumulation of small advantages. Analytical Perspective: Creating such a puzzle or game requires deep positional understanding and tactical patience. Here are some key principles: Active piece play: Even without the queen, White's knights, rooks, and pawns can become active and create multiple threats over time. A single piece or pawn can become a source of immense long-term compensation if it's placed well. Weakness exploitation: White should focus on creating weaknesses in Black’s camp-often, this means aiming for the creation of isolated pawns, weak squares, or poorly placed pieces. Sowing uncertainty in the opponent’s camp: By consistently creating threats and putting pressure on the opponent, White can force mistakes or reduce Black’s ability to activate the queen’s advantage. Endgame transition: A winning position typically emerges in the endgame, where the relative value of pieces can shift based on activity and pawn structure. Often, it's not about winning back the exact material but creating a situation where White’s remaining pieces dominate. Conclusion: It is absolutely possible to create a scenario where a queen sacrifice results in regaining material over 30+ moves while securing a winning position. The key is a combination of strategic maneuvering, exploiting the opponent's weaknesses, and transitioning into an endgame with a substantial advantage. If you’re looking to explore this idea further with a specific game in mind, I could also help build out a more detailed sequence or analyze a game with similar concepts. Would you like to dive into any specific aspect of the analysis further?
@6:30 thats true, Levy hides the opponents names so it'd be less pressure if he is playing against GM or not!
Hikaru never fails to roast Kramnik 😂😂
Its 30 mins since the video released and video is 1hr long wtf are u talking bro
@insanexd69 you need some sense of humer to understand never mind bro chill
@@dhruvkootal4237 ur sense of humour is 6ft deep 😐 don’t even think about replying
@@insanexd69 then why are you replying buddy, again - Just Chill don't bother
Stop saying the end of your career is coming soon, you don't have any replacements in our hearts😢
5:57 "If you have no idea who you're playing against, you won't get nervous and made mistakes"
Levy "Sun Tzu" Rozman
4:26 MaxLewi seems to be a cheater. Dude loses to a 600 and 900 on 7/11/2024, then turns around and beats a 2000 in 23 moves on 7/18/2024, LMFAO!
36:08 50:13 RIP opponents hung their queen ✝️
Love you Hickey
this needs to be a pin of shame @GMHkaru
@ boo 👎👎
Bro gave him a hickey
700 elo took me 4 months to get through, i got to 900 in a week after hitting 800. 700 elos really are just cracked. i swear at least 60% of the games they play above a 1200 elo level
Same dude, identical story lol. I was bouncing around 650-750 ELO for a month, then busted through to 850 winning 27 of my most recent 30. I've improved a bit through that time, though it's the strangest thing!
Same it took me almost 2-3 weeks to go above 720 elo and only 4-5 days from 800 to 900
25:50 ohh this guy is from Madagascar
If you see this comment brother, I wanna just greet you
17:38 freakyy aahh
This is great. Saving this for later forsure thanks Hikaru
Naka literally forgot guki 18:12😂
Yesterday I played so many games where my opponents didn't take my queen that was captured and doesn't have space to run away
I'm so bad at tactical and strategy in this game
I just saw some opponents mistake and took advantage of it and that's it.
I'm just a chill guy
Very high quality content! I look forward to new videos from you! 😛💕
9:52 This is legit how people play at 600 elo lol.
Love you Prof, but there's no way I'm getting all that! ❤
Love you for loving magkaru
@@renos_ Love you more sweetie
@@magkarulover 🙏✨
Hi Hikaru , 11:36 here Q*f3 is also playable right .
socks to bed = best sleep possible , if you say no and havent tried that makes no sense cuz your experience is the base 😂😅🎉🎉😅
professor h is fantastic
we love ice skaters
Thank you Hikaru!
Correction: learn to attack 1 one hundredth the strength of Hikaru nikimaru
pls more bongcloud speedrun
I had the pleasure of playing with Hikaru the other day, ofc he crushed me easily but it was fun.
What are the letters on the chessboards on the thumbnail?
You are my favorite chess player GM Hikaru! Your style of play is amazing and you will always be the fastest chess player in the world (at least for me). Greetings from Venezuela by the way!🇻🇪♟️👋🏼
I'm a newbie at chess but you know what they say "practice makes perfect" :v ⚡
As a new player (rapid elo 1000), i always learn something from your videos. But as an educational video, it would be a lot better without the off-topic chatting.
🙄 'freestyle' was so funny at the start..
Hii hikaaruuuuuuu nakamura
Magnus wins 60k$ for beating fabi
Cheers editor or hikaru its happy hour somewhere
I have No idea If u See this but could you make a vid about crushing the London system my coach Play it very Always and i have No idea what to do
Naka should keep the doors opened with Freestyle and Ian Buetner's sponsorships! Be in good terms with them!
There is good money in that! What's the problem with the name??? Fisher Random, Chess960, Freestyle ...
Ok so now I’m gm
Does anyone know the song playing at 54:40?? Plsss
Big fan sir hirkaru
wow so cool
You know what I hate when I play like 600 they play like pros making all there moves almost the best moves but when you play 600s they do a4 or some random move smh
Who is that Hikaru Nakamura guy?
i see hikaru new video i click simple
what's with people offering draws whan they're in losing positions and don't know what to move :")
16:24 anyone know what's the painting of?
@12:50 ok how about $TSEM?
49:45 he bought it?
Hello Everyone....
Get Out of Here....
Only Real Chess Pro can understand these Two phrases 🔥🔥
Why's hikaru's opponent between 400-2500?
He is playing arena tournament not classic live matches randomly
😂
bandwagon
Meow
Creating a queen sacrifice that leads to a position where you regain the material after more than 30 moves and reach a winning position is definitely an interesting challenge! This concept touches on both positional chess and tactical sacrifice, which are essential elements in high-level play. Here's how we can break it down:
Concept and Structure
The goal of the puzzle is to create a situation where:
The queen sacrifice is justified: The sacrifice must lead to a positional advantage (e.g., more active pieces, control of key squares, or long-term strategic pressure), even though you're down material.
Material is regained gradually: The queen is not immediately regained but is instead compensated with dynamic factors like piece activity, pawn structure, or positional dominance. This means the compensation comes in small steps, building up over time.
After regaining the material (30+ moves later), you transition into a winning position through superior endgame or tactical play, exploiting weaknesses in the opponent’s position.
Example Puzzle Setup (Hypothetical Game)
Below is a conceptual outline for such a game. To make it interesting and consistent with your request, I'll create a game where White sacrifices the queen and, after 30+ moves, is able to dominate the position through superior piece activity and long-term strategy.
Let’s assume White is down a queen and needs to carefully maneuver for compensation. We’ll look at the opening sacrifice and its gradual recovery.
Starting Position: The Queen Sacrifice (White sacrifices the Queen)
e4 e5
Nf3 Nc6
Bb5 a6
Bxc6 bxc6 (Now White sacrifices the Queen)
d3 d6
O-O Bg4
h3 Bh5
c4 c5 (White starts to build a pawn majority and maneuver)
Nc3 Nf6
Ne2 Be7
Ng3 Bg6 (White starts to reorganize pieces)
Be3 O-O
Qd2 a5
a3 Qd7 (Both sides are developing; White’s sacrifice has not yet been compensated)
This is the point at which White is down a queen but is building a solid foundation for counterplay. White has a strong pawn center and more active pieces, while Black has the material advantage.
Gradual Recovery (Over the Next 30+ Moves)
b3 (Preparing to expand on the queenside)
Rac1 (Placing a rook on an open file)
Rfd1 (Increasing pressure on the d-file)
Qe2 (Centralizing the queen, maybe eyeing a future attack)
Nf5 (Attacking the weak g7 pawn, gaining a tempo)
Qd2 (Bringing the queen back into play)
Rg1 (Preparation for kingside attack)
Key Points of Positional Play During This Phase:
White's compensation: White is slowly regaining material through tactical threats (like the weak g7 pawn) or strategic maneuvering (e.g., opening files and diagonal control).
Black’s weaknesses: Black has weaknesses in pawn structure and piece coordination (e.g., passive rooks or weak squares), which White can exploit over time.
Tactical threats: White might threaten forks, discovered attacks, or piece activity that compensates for the missing queen. Over time, the combined pressure of piece activity, open files, and weak squares can lead to material regain.
Final Recovery and Winning Position
After around 30 moves, the game would look something like this:
c4 (White opens up the center, further increasing the activity)
Rc1 (Bringing all pieces to bear on Black's queenside weakness)
Qd2 (Rooks doubled on the d-file, targeting Black’s weak pawn structure)
Nxe7+ (Finally, White regains a piece, with a potential winning position)
Qxe7
Re1 (White now has a dominant rook, dominating the open files)
Qd1+
Qxd1 (Rooks are traded)
Nf5+ (Forking pieces, gaining further material)
Now, White has regained material and is clearly winning through superior activity, piece coordination, and dominating the open files. The loss of the queen was compensated for gradually, and the final result is a winning position through accumulation of small advantages.
Analytical Perspective:
Creating such a puzzle or game requires deep positional understanding and tactical patience. Here are some key principles:
Active piece play: Even without the queen, White's knights, rooks, and pawns can become active and create multiple threats over time. A single piece or pawn can become a source of immense long-term compensation if it's placed well.
Weakness exploitation: White should focus on creating weaknesses in Black’s camp-often, this means aiming for the creation of isolated pawns, weak squares, or poorly placed pieces.
Sowing uncertainty in the opponent’s camp: By consistently creating threats and putting pressure on the opponent, White can force mistakes or reduce Black’s ability to activate the queen’s advantage.
Endgame transition: A winning position typically emerges in the endgame, where the relative value of pieces can shift based on activity and pawn structure. Often, it's not about winning back the exact material but creating a situation where White’s remaining pieces dominate.
Conclusion:
It is absolutely possible to create a scenario where a queen sacrifice results in regaining material over 30+ moves while securing a winning position. The key is a combination of strategic maneuvering, exploiting the opponent's weaknesses, and transitioning into an endgame with a substantial advantage.
If you’re looking to explore this idea further with a specific game in mind, I could also help build out a more detailed sequence or analyze a game with similar concepts. Would you like to dive into any specific aspect of the analysis further?
I used to like it when Hikaru was toxic over the board ngl
bruh the last paragraph is literally chatgpt's signature
Yep, why not
Chatgpt
The result of extreme laziness being combined with desperation for internet points
1 minute ago!!
i dont wanna learn from you
Tulok
Then don't
Then stay 500 elos lmao
Bro commenting like someone forced him to learn from him only 😂
Can i get pinned by hikaru🥵