• gameknot.com

    From Praetor Mandrake@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jun 16 14:02:04 2022
    I showed my late uncle my gameknot.com scores. It was something
    like 4500 wins and 5500 losses. I thought he'd be impressed
    because I had played 10,000 games. He was disappointed in
    me. "I'd like to see more wins than losses," he said.

    I axed my account and restarted.

    Right now I have 23 more losses than wins. The margin is slowly decreasing, was 28 more losses about two weeks ago.

    The real problem was that at the time I recreated the account I
    was going through turbulence in life. I had 51 games with
    timeouts which means I just let them lose after an opponent's
    move. Slowly but surely I'm eliminating timeouts (they're at
    17% now) and catching up wins to losses. I'm not going to tell
    you how I'm getting more wins than losses, because a chess
    player has to keep certain secrets. But you can surely guess.

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  • From Blueshirt@21:1/5 to Praetor Mandrake on Thu Jun 16 22:25:36 2022
    Praetor Mandrake wrote:

    I showed my late uncle my gameknot.com scores. It was something
    like 4500 wins and 5500 losses. I thought he'd be impressed
    because I had played 10,000 games. He was disappointed in
    me. "I'd like to see more wins than losses," he said.

    I axed my account and restarted.

    Why not just try to win more games? Okay it might have taken a while
    to catch up but at least the figures will be accurate. Why lose all of
    your game data? 10,000 games is impressive, as is 4,500 wins! (Always
    focus on the positives!)

    I haven't played that many games of online chess in comparison but [on Chess.com] I think I have more losses than wins too. I wouldn't see it
    as a major problem, unless you were trying to become a GM or something.

    Right now I have 23 more losses than wins. The margin is slowly
    decreasing, was 28 more losses about two weeks ago.

    The real problem was that at the time I recreated the account I
    was going through turbulence in life. I had 51 games with
    timeouts which means I just let them lose after an opponent's
    move. Slowly but surely I'm eliminating timeouts (they're at
    17% now) and catching up wins to losses.

    Timeouts are a lousy way to lose a game...

    I'm not going to tell you how I'm getting more wins than losses,
    because a chess player has to keep certain secrets. But you can
    surely guess.

    The power of prayer?? ;-)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Ken Blake@21:1/5 to blueshirt@indigo.news on Fri Jun 17 07:14:42 2022
    On Thu, 16 Jun 2022 22:25:36 -0000 (UTC), "Blueshirt"
    <blueshirt@indigo.news> wrote:

    Praetor Mandrake wrote:

    I showed my late uncle my gameknot.com scores. It was something
    like 4500 wins and 5500 losses. I thought he'd be impressed
    because I had played 10,000 games. He was disappointed in
    me. "I'd like to see more wins than losses," he said.

    I axed my account and restarted.

    Did it answer?


    Why not just try to win more games? Okay it might have taken a while
    to catch up but at least the figures will be accurate. Why lose all of
    your game data? 10,000 games is impressive, as is 4,500 wins! (Always
    focus on the positives!)

    I'm 84, and I almost never play any games of chess, online or
    over-the-board, any more. But I don't think I've played as many as
    10,000 games in my whole life.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From William Hyde@21:1/5 to Ken Blake on Mon Jun 20 12:38:49 2022
    On Friday, June 17, 2022 at 10:14:45 AM UTC-4, Ken Blake wrote:
    On Thu, 16 Jun 2022 22:25:36 -0000 (UTC), "Blueshirt"
    <blue...@indigo.news> wrote:

    Praetor Mandrake wrote:

    I showed my late uncle my gameknot.com scores. It was something
    like 4500 wins and 5500 losses. I thought he'd be impressed
    because I had played 10,000 games. He was disappointed in
    me. "I'd like to see more wins than losses," he said.

    I axed my account and restarted.
    Did it answer?
    Why not just try to win more games? Okay it might have taken a while
    to catch up but at least the figures will be accurate. Why lose all of
    your game data? 10,000 games is impressive, as is 4,500 wins! (Always
    focus on the positives!)
    I'm 84, and I almost never play any games of chess, online or
    over-the-board, any more. But I don't think I've played as many as
    10,000 games in my whole life.

    At age 60 Blackburne estimated that he had played at least 50,000 games of chess. And he still had twenty active years to go.

    If you count speed games, I may be at the ten thousand level. I've played only a couple of
    hundred rated OTB games, a few dozen postal, and a few hundred offhand games.

    As to win/loss ratio, that's a function of your opponents strength. A friend on lichess has
    a terrible ratio, as he only ever plays stockfish at level eight. If he played level three, he'd
    have a hundred percent score. He's the anti-Eli.

    I prefer to play it at a level where it wins the majority of games, and in my case that's
    level six, usually.

    William Hyde

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  • From Blueshirt@21:1/5 to William Hyde on Tue Jun 21 10:32:06 2022
    William Hyde wrote:

    On Friday, June 17, 2022 at 10:14:45 AM UTC-4, Ken Blake wrote:
    I'm 84, and I almost never play any games of chess, online or over-the-board, any more. But I don't think I've played as many as
    10,000 games in my whole life.

    At age 60 Blackburne estimated that he had played at least 50,000
    games of chess. And he still had twenty active years to go.

    If you count speed games, I may be at the ten thousand level. I've
    played only a couple of hundred rated OTB games, a few dozen postal,
    and a few hundred offhand games.

    Online people like to play the quicker formats I think; Bullet, Blitz
    or Rapid... If all anyone ever played was 1|0 Bullet you could easily
    play 50/60 games a day and rack up thousands of games a year.

    As to win/loss ratio, that's a function of your opponents strength.
    A friend on lichess has a terrible ratio, as he only ever plays
    stockfish at level eight. If he played level three, he'd have a
    hundred percent score. He's the anti-Eli.

    I prefer to play it at a level where it wins the majority of games,
    and in my case that's level six, usually.

    Why not play people online?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From William Hyde@21:1/5 to Blueshirt on Tue Jun 21 11:43:40 2022
    On Tuesday, June 21, 2022 at 6:32:08 AM UTC-4, Blueshirt wrote:
    William Hyde wrote:

    On Friday, June 17, 2022 at 10:14:45 AM UTC-4, Ken Blake wrote:
    I'm 84, and I almost never play any games of chess, online or over-the-board, any more. But I don't think I've played as many as
    10,000 games in my whole life.

    At age 60 Blackburne estimated that he had played at least 50,000
    games of chess. And he still had twenty active years to go.

    If you count speed games, I may be at the ten thousand level. I've
    played only a couple of hundred rated OTB games, a few dozen postal,
    and a few hundred offhand games.
    Online people like to play the quicker formats I think; Bullet, Blitz
    or Rapid... If all anyone ever played was 1|0 Bullet you could easily
    play 50/60 games a day and rack up thousands of games a year.
    As to win/loss ratio, that's a function of your opponents strength.
    A friend on lichess has a terrible ratio, as he only ever plays
    stockfish at level eight. If he played level three, he'd have a
    hundred percent score. He's the anti-Eli.

    I prefer to play it at a level where it wins the majority of games,
    and in my case that's level six, usually.
    Why not play people online?

    I do, on occasion. But I lag badly for some reason, and the computer is less annoyed by this.

    William Hyde

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