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[POST]: #2 Playing FIDE rated chess, in real life #3

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arienshibani opened this issue May 10, 2024 · 0 comments
Open

[POST]: #2 Playing FIDE rated chess, in real life #3

arienshibani opened this issue May 10, 2024 · 0 comments
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arienshibani commented May 10, 2024


title: Online vs. OTB Chess ♟️
subtitle: Transitioning from online chess to FIDE rated OTB tournaments
description: Tips, tricks, and things you should remember
slug: playing-fide-rated-chess
tags: [chess, featured]
category: blog
date: 2024-10-05
canonical: https://niceblogg.netlify.app/

I've been playing chess for as long as I can remember. Usually just casual games onlines against random people. However, In January, I discovered the thrill of playing FIDE rated chess over the board (OTB). The gap from online chess to playing "in real life" was much larger than I expected. In this post, I'll share some of the biggest differences I have experienced.

Online vs OTB ♟️

1. No safeguards against illegal moves 🦺

Playing on Chess.com, the consequences of illegal moves don't exist. You literally cannot make them. Over the board, however, the absence of any safeguards will be devastating the first few times you play. The tournament organizer (The arbiter) will usually give the offending player's opponent extra minutes on their clock. In a blitz or bullet game, this is really devastating.

2. You will be playing a lot slower 🐌

Having to physically move pieces, manually calculating the legality of your moves, and the absence of pre-moves are all factors that will slow you down much more than you'd think. If you are used to playing 3+2, I'd suggest you practice 2+1 to get a feel of how fast "time" flies over the board. I would also suggest you use this to your advantage! By prepping and memorizing certain lines of your favorite openings, you will be able to blitz out moves with confidence early on, saving you precious time for the endgame.

3. Psychology 🧠

In OTB chess, players experience the pressure of their opponent's physical presence, adding a psychological dimension to the game. I found this to be verry interesting aspect of it. You can do stuff like make completely desparate random moves with extreme confidence. And your oponent will think twice about wether you are just bluffing or making bullshit moves.

4. Club Play and Social Dynamics 🤝

Participating in over-the-board chess clubs introduces a unique social aspect to the game. Playing regularly in a club environment exposes your opening repertoire to fellow club members, who may learn and adapt to your preferred lines over time. This creates an enriching learning experience as you engage in discussions, analysis, and friendly rivalry with clubmates.

@arienshibani arienshibani added work in progress Label used for posts that are in the making published Label used for published blog posts and removed work in progress Label used for posts that are in the making labels May 10, 2024
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