If a Grandmaster blunders is it higher rated and stronger than a blunder by an amateur?
I ask because I create fictional games between chess players from the past and present in a new genre of chess fiction I call the chess time machine.
I was lucky enough to have the chess YouTube king Agadmator feature one of my chess time machine fictional games Bobby Fischer vs Garry Kasparov. His followers said the game was not believable lol 😂 because Kasparov wouldn't blunder like that 🤔
www.youtube.com/watch?v=8N-Wqo3Hy5A
So is a Grandmaster losing to mate in one less of a blunder than a 1400 elo player blundering mate in one?
I mean when Grandmasters play each other and one of them wins the other loses right? That means the losing GM has blundered. I know some people will not accept this perspective.
I ask because I create fictional games between chess players from the past and present in a new genre of chess fiction I call the chess time machine.
I was lucky enough to have the chess YouTube king Agadmator feature one of my chess time machine fictional games Bobby Fischer vs Garry Kasparov. His followers said the game was not believable lol 😂 because Kasparov wouldn't blunder like that 🤔
www.youtube.com/watch?v=8N-Wqo3Hy5A
So is a Grandmaster losing to mate in one less of a blunder than a 1400 elo player blundering mate in one?
I mean when Grandmasters play each other and one of them wins the other loses right? That means the losing GM has blundered. I know some people will not accept this perspective.