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Feelingless player

Sometimes i play the unexpected move to confuse my opponent making him seeing gosts, smth like that, but this guy was incredibly stable.

https://lichess.org/HoWKiscT9p8t

Sometimes i play the unexpected move to confuse my opponent making him seeing gosts, smth like that, but this guy was incredibly stable. https://lichess.org/HoWKiscT9p8t

Even better than a confused opponent is a helpless one. :)

Even better than a confused opponent is a helpless one. :)

Your opponent was also strong but he did some blunders.

Your opponent was also strong but he did some blunders.

Incidentally, there is a lovely idea buried in the position after 57... N6b7. Take away Black's h-pawn and White manages to draw through the circuitous Kb8-a7-a6 (reaching the freeing square b5).

Take away White's f-pawn as well though and a win becomes possible--mainly because the d-pawn takes a square away from his king. :)

Incidentally, there is a lovely idea buried in the position after 57... N6b7. Take away Black's h-pawn and White manages to draw through the circuitous Kb8-a7-a6 (reaching the freeing square b5). Take away White's f-pawn as well though and a win becomes possible--mainly because the d-pawn takes a square away from his king. :)

@MrPushwood said in #4:

Incidentally, there is a lovely idea buried in the position after 57... N6b7. Take away Black's h-pawn and White manages to draw through the circuitous Kb8-a7-a6 (reaching the freeing square b5).

Take away White's f-pawn as well though and a win becomes possible--mainly because the d-pawn takes a square away from his king. :)
I did'nt know this

@MrPushwood said in #4: > Incidentally, there is a lovely idea buried in the position after 57... N6b7. Take away Black's h-pawn and White manages to draw through the circuitous Kb8-a7-a6 (reaching the freeing square b5). > > Take away White's f-pawn as well though and a win becomes possible--mainly because the d-pawn takes a square away from his king. :) I did'nt know this

@MrPushwood said in #4:

Incidentally, there is a lovely idea buried in the position after 57... N6b7. Take away Black's h-pawn and White manages to draw through the circuitous Kb8-a7-a6 (reaching the freeing square b5).

Take away White's f-pawn as well though and a win becomes possible--mainly because the d-pawn takes a square away from his king. :)

Brah, this is too above my head.

@MrPushwood said in #4: > Incidentally, there is a lovely idea buried in the position after 57... N6b7. Take away Black's h-pawn and White manages to draw through the circuitous Kb8-a7-a6 (reaching the freeing square b5). > > Take away White's f-pawn as well though and a win becomes possible--mainly because the d-pawn takes a square away from his king. :) Brah, this is too above my head.

@CSaiJagruth said in #3:

Your opponent was also strong but he did some blunders.
Yaa, they said : Blunders are there waiting to be made lol.

@CSaiJagruth said in #3: > Your opponent was also strong but he did some blunders. Yaa, they said : Blunders are there waiting to be made lol.

You both made blunders

You both made blunders

@KiHjJjH said in #8:

You both made blunders
Yaa you are right.
Am here to analyse the game psychologically.

@KiHjJjH said in #8: > You both made blunders Yaa you are right. Am here to analyse the game psychologically.

@MohammedElasha
White was playing well in the initial phase but lost out on advantage. Still gave fight but ended on losing side.
White could have forced threefold repetition draw around 42nd move. If White saw it and hoped to win the position then it would feel really sad.

@MohammedElasha White was playing well in the initial phase but lost out on advantage. Still gave fight but ended on losing side. White could have forced threefold repetition draw around 42nd move. If White saw it and hoped to win the position then it would feel really sad.

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