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| title = Puzzle | | title = Puzzle | ||
| image = puzzle.png | | image = puzzle.png | ||
− | | titletext = Prediction for Carlsen v. Anand: ...25. Qb8+ Nxb8 26. Rd8# f6 27. "...dude." Qf5 28. "The game is over, dude." Qxg5 29. Rxe8 0-1 30. "Dude, your move can't be '0-1'. Don't write that down." [Black flips board] | + | | titletext = Prediction for Carlsen v. Anand: ... 25. Qb8+ Nxb8 26. Rd8# f6 27. "... dude." Qf5 28. "The game is over, dude." Qxg5 29. Rxe8 0-1 30. "Dude, your move can't be '0-1'. Don't write that down." [Black flips board] |
}} | }} | ||
==Explanation== | ==Explanation== | ||
− | + | {{incomplete}} | |
− | + | The game of {{w|Go (game)|go}} (also called Weiqi, Baduk or Igo) is usually played on the 19x19 intersections of a grid, but sometimes a faster, simpler version is played on the 9x9 intersections of a grid (which thus has 8x8 squares, as a chessboard, though they are not colored in an alternating pattern - {{w|White and Black in chess|introduced to chess in the 13th century}}). In the comic, white has chess figures and plays against black, which uses go stones. | |
− | + | Two versions of the board were posted by Randall: both had white after P-e3, P-d4, N-f3, N-c3, but the first with an extra bishop at e4 (B@e4), the second after B-d2. | |
− | + | B@e4 in the first version of the board was perhaps intended to represent confusion in White's mind whether he was playing Go (placing a piece) or Chess (it's a chess piece) - as a 'placement' this move could have been first, and could explain P-e3 with e4 already being blocked. | |
− | + | It it unclear whether black has gone first (as is traditional in Go) with five Go stones (none in the 3-3 handicap positions marked on a 9x9 Go board) vs five chess moves. White moves first has been traditional in Chess for about a century. | |
− | The | + | The title text is in the format of a game transcript, starting on the 25th move. Black is making chess moves, apparently having accepted that it is a game of chess after all. |
− | + | At 25, white's Queen moves to b8 for check and is captured by black's Knight taking it, but after white's Rook checkmates at d8 (denoted by #; presumably the king is trapped on 8 behind pawns), Black (illegally) continues to play with something moving to f6 (this could be interpreted as a Go move), and responds to White's protests with the chess moves Queen to f5 and then Queen takes at g5. | |
+ | |||
+ | White eventually takes Black's king (presumably) at e8 with the checkmating Rook, and black responds by writing 0-1, which looks similar to the 0-0 notation for 'castling', but is in fact the notation used to declare that black has won the game - perhaps the psychological game of forcing white to play 'Chess' after the checkmate, thereby forcing white to concede that the game is not - after all - chess. White protests this 'move' too, and black spills the board. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{w|Magnus Carlsen}} is a 22 year old Norwegian chess grandmaster, who had the highest peak rating and was the third youngest grandmaster in history. He was the world's 2009 blitz champion. {{w|Viswanathan Anand}} is a 43 year old Indian grandmaster has been undisputed World Champion since 2007. | ||
==Transcript== | ==Transcript== | ||
− | :[A game board with | + | :[A game board with 8x8 white squares and black borders, like a goboard or an all white chessboard, there are white chess pieces in starting position on the bottom after P-e3, P-d4, N-f3, N-c3, B-d2 and five black Go pieces on the edges in the center of the board on d4 d5 c6 g4 g6.] |
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:White to continue insisting this is a chessboard | :White to continue insisting this is a chessboard | ||
{{comic discussion}} | {{comic discussion}} | ||
[[Category:Chess]] | [[Category:Chess]] | ||
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