I was particularly amused that Mr Shahade considers it inhuman to have to quit his bed at 9.00am. I have known a number of people like that but they normally grow out of it in their later teenage years.Ian Thompson wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 3:53 pmOne might start by asking him why he thinks everyone who plays in the US Open doesn't choose the 4 day schedule (6 games of rapid chess and 3 games of slow chess), instead choosing either the 6 day schedule (9 games of slow chess over 6 days) or the 9 day schedule (9 games of slow chess over 9 days).Adam Raoof wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 2:33 pmThere are so many things wrong with that blog post I don't know where to begin.AustinElliott wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 2:23 pmAnyone think the Hastings tournament might benefit from switching to faster time limits? I was just reading Greg Shahade's blogpost on "Slow Chess Should Die A Fast Death" (which has probably been discussed here on here before). I guess it would mean a shorter tournament in terms of days, with potentially a bit more drama. Would a shorter tournament be more attractive to 2600+ players, or is it just a question of the prize money on offer?
Hastings
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Re: Hastings
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Re: Hastings
Based on what?Alex Holowczak wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 3:52 pmI think his main premise - that if we invented chess today we would expect the game to last 30-40 minutes - is more or less spot on; I wouldn't expect it to be more than an hour.Adam Raoof wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 2:33 pmThere are so many things wrong with that blog post I don't know where to begin.AustinElliott wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 2:23 pmAnyone think the Hastings tournament might benefit from switching to faster time limits? I was just reading Greg Shahade's blogpost on "Slow Chess Should Die A Fast Death" (which has probably been discussed here on here before). I guess it would mean a shorter tournament in terms of days, with potentially a bit more drama. Would a shorter tournament be more attractive to 2600+ players, or is it just a question of the prize money on offer?
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Re: Hastings
Yes but even if that is true, so what?Alex Holowczak wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 3:52 pmI think his main premise - that if we invented chess today we would expect the game to last 30-40 minutes - is more or less spot on; I wouldn't expect it to be more than an hour.Adam Raoof wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 2:33 pmThere are so many things wrong with that blog post I don't know where to begin.AustinElliott wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 2:23 pmAnyone think the Hastings tournament might benefit from switching to faster time limits? I was just reading Greg Shahade's blogpost on "Slow Chess Should Die A Fast Death" (which has probably been discussed here on here before). I guess it would mean a shorter tournament in terms of days, with potentially a bit more drama. Would a shorter tournament be more attractive to 2600+ players, or is it just a question of the prize money on offer?
"Set up your attacks so that when the fire is out, it isn't out!" (H N Pillsbury)
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Re: Hastings
Would you be playing chess as a physical game with board and pieces or a computer game?Alex Holowczak wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 3:52 pmI think his main premise - that if we invented chess today we would expect the game to last 30-40 minutes - is more or less spot on
Assuming you are playing face to face and doing it on the cheap, there aren't going to be 600 million sales of sensory boards or even 15,000 in the UK. Players taking it with some degree of seriousness are going to want to be able to record what happened. It's one of the things that's regular in serious chess but absent from many other sports, games and pastimes.
Playing double round 30 minute games or similar has been proposed as a league format in the UK with only limited take up.
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Re: Hastings
It's patently not possible to be "spot on" about that kind of a hypothesis.Alex Holowczak wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 3:52 pmI think his main premise - that if we invented chess today we would expect the game to last 30-40 minutes - is more or less spot on; I wouldn't expect it to be more than an hour.Adam Raoof wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 2:33 pmThere are so many things wrong with that blog post I don't know where to begin.AustinElliott wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 2:23 pmAnyone think the Hastings tournament might benefit from switching to faster time limits? I was just reading Greg Shahade's blogpost on "Slow Chess Should Die A Fast Death" (which has probably been discussed here on here before). I guess it would mean a shorter tournament in terms of days, with potentially a bit more drama. Would a shorter tournament be more attractive to 2600+ players, or is it just a question of the prize money on offer?
"Do you play chess?"
"Yes, but I prefer a game with a better chance of cheating."
lostontime.blogspot.com
"Yes, but I prefer a game with a better chance of cheating."
lostontime.blogspot.com
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Re: Hastings
Serious, heavyweight strategy board games created these days tend to weigh in at around the three-hour mark.
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"I think his main premise - that if we invented chess today we would expect the game to last 30-40 minutes - is more or less spot on; I wouldn't expect it to be more than an hour."
But surely serious and talented players or anyone who attempts to understand the game would prefer it to last longer than that? I agree with Jack - Terra Mystica takes a while, even Settlers of Catan can turn into a long positional grind!
But surely serious and talented players or anyone who attempts to understand the game would prefer it to last longer than that? I agree with Jack - Terra Mystica takes a while, even Settlers of Catan can turn into a long positional grind!
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Re: Hastings
Richard Bates wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 6:16 pmBased on what?Alex Holowczak wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 3:52 pmI think his main premise - that if we invented chess today we would expect the game to last 30-40 minutes - is more or less spot on; I wouldn't expect it to be more than an hour.
Based on the fact that games aren't designed to last 5-7 hours these days. If cricket were invented tomorrow, do you think we'd be more likely to play a 5-day game or a T20 game? If golf were invented tomorrow, would the tournaments be four 18-hole rounds?
As for "so what?", I was disagreeing with Adam saying that "There are so many things wrong with that blog post I don't know where to begin." I'm of the opinion that he's not as far wide of the mark as Adam might think.
You will know better than me, but my instinct - having watched you play some of these at the Classic in the mornings - is that they have more layers of complexity than chess. By that, I mean that while chess has 32 pieces moving around the board moving in different ways, but at least some of the board games I've watched you play have pieces moving around the board in different ways, but also cards that do a number of different things. I remember it took you about 10-15 minutes just to take all of the pieces out of their bags for one game. I wonder, would chess be considered "heavyweight" by the standards of modern board games?IM Jack Rudd wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 7:15 pmSerious, heavyweight strategy board games created these days tend to weigh in at around the three-hour mark.
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Re: Hastings
If cricket was invented tomorrow, it would be played over 3 hours on a Saturday afternoon between two villages in Kent as it was in the 18th century and no doubt the equivalent of a Mr Holowczak would be one of the first to start arguing about the lbw law.
There is nothing wrong with playing chess at blitz, rapid or longer time limits. They are different games and I enjoy all of them but the greatest examples of the art of chess (whether or not it's an art doesn't matter - you know what I mean) have been played by the greatest exponents at longer time limits.
There is nothing wrong with playing chess at blitz, rapid or longer time limits. They are different games and I enjoy all of them but the greatest examples of the art of chess (whether or not it's an art doesn't matter - you know what I mean) have been played by the greatest exponents at longer time limits.
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Re: Hastings
These questions don't mean anything and the answers are therefore unknowable.Alex Holowczak wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 7:58 pm. If cricket were invented tomorrow, do you think we'd be more likely to play a 5-day game or a T20 game? If golf were invented tomorrow, would the tournaments be four 18-hole rounds?
"Do you play chess?"
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lostontime.blogspot.com
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Re: Hastings
I don’t see why the development of chess (if invented today) or most other games come to that, would be much different now than in the past. New people take up the game all the time (unaffected by any “historic” assumptions) and I would argue that absolute beginners playing chess will routinely tend towards the lengthy. It takes a great deal of skill and experience to play chess of any quality at faster rates, the sort of experience that generally only comes from study and experience of longer games. Indeed many people never get to a state of being able to cope with playing faster games.
To the extent that time controls have speeded up in the modern era, that is more a consequence of both the shift away from adjournments and advance of opening theory meaning that players can generally get further into the game before having to think independently.
Reinvent the game from scratch and all the historic experience would have to be rediscovered. Most sports are the length they are because they have been refined over time to what is seen as the current optimum lengths. I don’t see why that should change just because they are invented in today’s world.
To the extent that time controls have speeded up in the modern era, that is more a consequence of both the shift away from adjournments and advance of opening theory meaning that players can generally get further into the game before having to think independently.
Reinvent the game from scratch and all the historic experience would have to be rediscovered. Most sports are the length they are because they have been refined over time to what is seen as the current optimum lengths. I don’t see why that should change just because they are invented in today’s world.
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I haven't seen many people arguing that marathons are old fashioned and should be replaced by 60-metre sprints; I thought they had become rather popular in recent years.Alex Holowczak wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 3:52 pmI think his main premise - that if we invented chess today we would expect the game to last 30-40 minutes - is more or less spot on; I wouldn't expect it to be more than an hour.
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Of course the answer is unknowable, but it's an interesting (at least to me) thought experiment.JustinHorton wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 9:27 pmThese questions don't mean anything and the answers are therefore unknowable.Alex Holowczak wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 7:58 pm. If cricket were invented tomorrow, do you think we'd be more likely to play a 5-day game or a T20 game? If golf were invented tomorrow, would the tournaments be four 18-hole rounds?
I don't think I'm arguing that either.Pete Morriss wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 10:01 pmI haven't seen many people arguing that marathons are old fashioned and should be replaced by 60-metre sprints; I thought they had become rather popular in recent years.Alex Holowczak wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 3:52 pmI think his main premise - that if we invented chess today we would expect the game to last 30-40 minutes - is more or less spot on; I wouldn't expect it to be more than an hour.
But in your example, a Marathon takes just over 2 hours for the world's best, which is barely the quickest possible standardplay game of chess. It might be long by running's standards, but a game of cricket wouldn't have finished in that time, and a game of football or rugby (including the half-time break) isn't much shorter.
Given that by faster rates, I basically mean what we call Rapidplay, I think most people could cope with that even if it is objectively to a lower standard than Standardplay, especially if that was all they ever knew. I don't agree that if we started chess tomorrow we'd eventually end up with the time limits we tend to use these days - I don't think we'd evolve back the concept of a time control at move 40, which exists as a legacy of the old 40 moves in 2 1/2 hours time limit with adjournments and then 16 moves per hour.Richard Bates wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 9:40 pmI don’t see why the development of chess (if invented today) or most other games come to that, would be much different now than in the past. New people take up the game all the time (unaffected by any “historic” assumptions) and I would argue that absolute beginners playing chess will routinely tend towards the lengthy. It takes a great deal of skill and experience to play chess of any quality at faster rates, the sort of experience that generally only comes from study and experience of longer games. Indeed many people never get to a state of being able to cope with playing faster games.
To the extent that time controls have speeded up in the modern era, that is more a consequence of both the shift away from adjournments and advance of opening theory meaning that players can generally get further into the game before having to think independently.
Reinvent the game from scratch and all the historic experience would have to be rediscovered. Most sports are the length they are because they have been refined over time to what is seen as the current optimum lengths. I don’t see why that should change just because they are invented in today’s world.
Most tournaments for absolute beginners - i.e. junior tournaments - tend to be rapidplay rather than standardplay. They move into standardplay when they get better. I would also point out that in a typical weekend congress, for example, games in the Minor on average finish much more quickly than games in the Open. So I'm not sure I agree that absolute beginners will tend towards taking more time rather than less. In fact, most coaches I know of beginner players are desperate to slow their players down!
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Re: Hastings
My experience of many years of meeting casual adult social players is that they play at a very slow speed. They are trying to play decent moves, but their sight of the board and pattern recognition isn't good enough. If they are persuaded into club play, even the pace of an evening league game can be too great. That's probably pre and non internet players given that Blitz is the predominant format outside the neo-correspondence turn based servers.Alex Holowczak wrote: ↑Tue Jan 08, 2019 10:26 pmSo I'm not sure I agree that absolute beginners will tend towards taking more time rather than less.
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Re: Hastings
Final round up from Pam Thomas.