The Evolution of Chess

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Published 2024-01-06
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The post: www.chess.com/article/view/history-of-chess#theory…

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All Comments (21)
  • @GlcB
    I still always think the arrival of the eval bar has been one of the biggest boosts for chess' universality. Now people who are beginners, intermediates, or totally inept at chess can watch and enjoy games as if it were a tennis match. Not fully understanding the intricacies of each move but understanding advantages and disadvantages - who's winning and who's losing.
  • @coreykline43
    Love all the historical references recently! Props to Levy!
  • @nathangreen69
    Wow, this was a wonderful video! You should really do more of this, 100x better than showing Magnus in every video, it was really interesting and educative. Absolutely loved it!
  • @kalinamura1416
    I'm loving the historical games. Its what originally got me into chess and your channel. I would love to see some games of Petrosian. He is an underrated world champion. He was arguably equally gifted to Tal but had the exact opposite style. They had many of the exact same strengths but used them in very different ways. It would be cool to see a video discussing his life and/or games
  • @Lightspark
    Some day in the future, this channel will be considered a historical evolution of chess. Thank you for never failing Levy ❤
  • I remember watching levy cover such historic games back in the day. It feels good to be back.
  • @JimmyVermeer
    Sorry if I seem a bit nitpicky, but Karpov lost the title to Kasparov in 1985, not 1984.
  • I usually don't comment, but I gotta say that this is one of your videos I enjoyed the most. It really conveys your deep passion for the game. I love the historical deep dives and seeing how everything evolved. Only love for 2024, keep entertaining us with this type of content gold :3
  • @MrStivi1981
    Nobody does chess history like this guy. Great job levy. I actually enjoy these videos a great deal.
  • @Kloiyd
    I’m really enjoying all the historical videos Levy has been posting lately. I hope you make more historical videos in the future as it’s interesting to see how the game has evolved overtime.
  • @Ryanmuniverse
    I’m so happy we’re getting historical videos like this. Pls keep them coming levy. You said they may not do as well but pls don’t let that discourage u from making these. They’re great!
  • @seejoneslift
    just want to say I can sense your passion and love for the game of chess through this video. The way you speak about the greats who came before is how I will speak about you in the future when I teach my kids. I played when I was little but stopped for many years and the passion to play again and get better now came from watching your videos and twitch streams. For that I thank you 🙏
  • @silasvinson3968
    Thank you for these chess history videos lately :) They’re some of my favorite content you make, and they’re so well done! Would love to see you do more of these — maybe even highlighting some lesser-known players throughout history like the one video you did on Sultan Khan way back. Thanks for all you do!
  • @PaperIsCool5
    3:48 just a minor correction, piano is quiet/soft and pianissimo is very quiet/soft there is also mezzo piano which is moderately soft/quiet
  • Chess history is simply the best type of content. Just sit back, learn about how this game used to be played, and implement some of it into your own style, thank you for this video Levy.
  • @andrewj-boy9406
    Best video you’ve made since I started watching a year ago. As someone who joined the chess community in early 2023 a lot of this was new to me and finally gave me faces/stories to put to names when I see openings titles. Thank you levy for growing and supporting this game that gives us so much.
  • @ChessGrandPasta
    A couple of fun facts by an Italian: first of all, Gioacchino is pronounced more like “Joakeeno” (and yes it’s spelled with a double c, in the video it says Gioachino), and he actually was the inventor of the greek gift: Greco in fact means Greek in Italian, so it has nothing to do with Greece, it’s just his last name but “greek gift” is actually a misstraslation, it’s as if we called an opening that Wesley So invented the “Thus opening” because of his last name. Hope this is clear!
  • @mauro_cb
    Please do more videos like this!!! Seeing those historical games and players is always fascinating and this is definitely m y favorite type of chess content
  • @ZeCroiSSanT950
    Levy, really appreciate your historical deep dives, hope you keep making these every once in a while!