This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Solution explained by Daniel King
Find the checkmate! Chess puzzle of the week - Black to play and win #shorts
Find the checkmate! Chess puzzle of the week - Black to play and win #shorts
Wesley So wins his 3rd US Chess Championship
https://chess24.com/en/read/news/wesley-so-wins-his-3rd-us-chess-championship
https://chess24.com/en/read/news/wesley-so-wins-his-3rd-us-chess-championship
Nikita Vitiugov first played in the Russian Championship as a 19-year-old in 2006 and has missed just one of the 15 tournaments since — in 2021 he finally won, with Valentina Gunina winning her 4th women's title!
https://chess24.com/en/read/news/vitiugov-and-gunina-win-russian-championship-titles
https://chess24.com/en/read/news/vitiugov-and-gunina-win-russian-championship-titles
"А я так долго шёл до пьедестала, что вмятины в помосте протоптал". Means so much for me! Russian Champion 2021.
🔗 Nikita Vitiugov (@N\_Vitiugov)
🔗 Nikita Vitiugov (@N\_Vitiugov)
Revisit our conversation with stars Anya Taylor Joy and Thomas Sangster
: https://netflixqueue.com/anya-taylor-joy-and-thomas-brodie-sangster-make-bold-moves/
: https://netflixqueue.com/anya-taylor-joy-and-thomas-brodie-sangster-make-bold-moves/
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
This evening, "King Enigma" visited Got Talent España, one of the most popular TV shows in Spain. In primetime, he played against Risto Mejide.
It was a high stakes game: had he lost, he would have had to reveal his secret identity 😱 ♟
🔗 Got Talent España (@GotTalentES):
It was a high stakes game: had he lost, he would have had to reveal his secret identity 😱 ♟
🔗 Got Talent España (@GotTalentES):
Mikhail Botvinnik in the 1940s (Multimedia Art Museum Archive, Moscow).
🔗 Olimpiu G. Urcan (@olimpiuurcan)
🔗 Olimpiu G. Urcan (@olimpiuurcan)
"You must take your opponent into a deep dark forest where 2+2=5, and the path leading out is only wide enough for one."
🔸 MIkhail Tal
@UnityChessClub
🔸 MIkhail Tal
@UnityChessClub
USSR, the summer of 1974. Anatoly Karpov (centre) is pictured with his trainers Semyon Furman (left) and Yuri Razuvaev, during preparations for Karpov's FIDE Candidates' final v. Viktor Korchnoi.
🔗 Douglas Griffin (@dgriffinchess)
🔗 Douglas Griffin (@dgriffinchess)