How Many Photogs/Chessplayers?

How Many Photogs/Chessplayers?

  • Yes

    Votes: 55 61.1%
  • No

    Votes: 35 38.9%

  • Total voters
    90
Well, Western chess is fun. I like to play the suicide version from time to time. Chinese and Korean chess are interesting, but they never caught my imagination to really pusue them. My favorite chess is the Japanese variant, Shogi. The end game in particular is really interesting, much more so than in Western chess. There are books of end game puzzles that are very popular which require the player to continually check the king until mate. Since captured pieces can be brought back into play all 40 pieces are in play at all times (20 pieces per side). The pieces are the same color, but are pointed so they can indicate which side they belong to. It is also played on a 9x9 board.
 
Classical chess in various time controls for me. I am an avid correspondence player, and play in local clubs when I can.

I'm a less-than-terrific photog though.

I like both photography and chess, but am not very good at either.
 
It is the best board game ever created!
I use to play chess often, but know I have no one to play with and only pick up an occasional game (every blue moon) at a coffe shop or park. I love it...especially timed. I'm sure my skills have deteriorated 🙁
I will have to check out gameknot.com

Thanks ya'll
Jason
 
I'm not a good player or anything, but play with the kids. My son invented a variation that involves the use of playing cards to let you move more spaces at a time, making the game a little more exciting. We call it "Super Chess"
 
I'm not good, but and I don't have anyone to play with but myself. At times, when I couldn't sleep, I used to play against myself. I picked the whites and the blacks won. If I picked the blacks, then the whites gave me a whipping.

I must be good... but then, I'm probably a pretty poor player.
 
Yup, love chess, not great, keep meaning to pick up a 'classic grandmaster games' book and read up on offence and defence strategies, but 2 kids get in the way. Bonus is that my 4 year old daughter really likes it and at least knows the player moves and can play more or less a whole short game. The cool thing is that she has started thinking ahead one move which I don't do in everyday life often. Like board games too - german type (Settlers of Catan, Tikal, Metro/Iron Horse etc.) even invented an entire game a couple of years ago including hundred of hours of playtesting. Long answer to a short question I guess.
 
I learned from my father when I was 10-11 and I don't think my game has improved much since. I love to play, I'm just not that good.😱
 
we have evolved it into "super chess" adding the use of playing cards, as well as variants like super deluxe chess, and super chess 2.0.
 
As a child I was a pretty good chess player and played occasionally as an adult. I taught my ten year old son to play chess .... and six months later he wiped me off the board. I never won another game from then on! 😀
 
Go seems certainly more interesting visually (though the chess pieces can be great little works of art). For me the interesting difference bewteen chess and go was that in go I found I could stumble through a half-competent opening using a sense of visual composition, looking for balance but avoiding overly mechanical symmetry -- almost like composing a photograph.

-- Michael
 
Back
Top Bottom