Tag: chess

  • Chapter 3: Chess variants

    As if learning standard Chess wasn’t enough fun, there are historical and modern variants of Chess. I can’t cover them all because there are literally hundreds. What I can do is tell you about some of my favorites and how they differ from Standard/Western Chess as described by most of this book.

    Crazyhouse

    Crazyhouse is a variant available on lichess where captured pieces are not simply gone from the board but instead convert to the color of the player who captured them to be dropped back on the board at a later turn! As you might guess, games in this variant tend to be longer because it is possible to escape a checkmate what you could not get out of in standard Chess.

    There are some special rules that you should be aware of.

    • Drops resulting in immediate checkmate are permitted.
    • Pawns may not be dropped on the players’ 1st or 8th ranks.
    • Promoted but captured pawns are dropped as pawns.

    The notation for Crazyhouse is the same as Chess except for the addition of the @ symbol to say that a previously captured piece is dropped back on the board.

    For example, consider the position of the Queen’s Gambit Declined from the previous chapter.

    d4-d5-c4-e6.png

    In this position, white decides to capture the d5 pawn with the c4 pawn.

    1. d4 d5 2. c4 e6 3. cxd5.png

    Next, black tried to put white’s king in check by moving bishop to b4.

    1. d4 d5 2. c4 e6 3. cxd5 Bb4+.png

    If this were regular Chess, white would not be able to move the king and would have to put a bishop or knight in the way to block the check. However, white previously captured a pawn and so they can drop one to the c3 square.

    1. d4 d5 2. c4 e6 3. cxd5 Bb4+ 4. @c3.png

    This means that the bishop is on the run and white has 9 pawns on the board. The situation is already looking like it will lead to a win for white.

    Atomic

    Another variant which is available on lichess is Atomic. In this game, whenever a piece is captured, it creates an explosion that blows up the surrounding 8 squares! However, pawns on those 8 squares do not explode for some reason. They must be made of Minecraft obsidian or something like that. However, when a pawn makes a capture, it does explode. For example, the following position shows that white has moved their king’s pawn two squares and black has moved their queen’s pawn two squares.

    1. e4 d5.png

    White can capture, however, when it does, both pawns disappear!

    1. e4 d5 2. exd5.png

    And now that there is nothing in the path of the black queen, they capture the d2 pawn and blow up white’s king, queen, and bishop because all of them were on the adjacent squares to the d2 pawn.

    1. e4 d5 2. exd5 Qxd2.png

    Black’s queen is also gone but black has already won this game of atomic chess! The king wasn’t just checkmated, it was actually destroyed in an explosion!

    So as you can see, atomic games don’t last very long because it doesn’t take many moves before pieces are destroyed. That doesn’t mean it is simple to win it though because I am not very good at it despite my experience in normal Chess. Still, it is my second favorite variant of standard Chess, right behind Crazyhouse!

    But there are more Chess variants available on other websites. Some of them are very different from the standard Chess but they have many things in common.

    Shogi

    For example, let me show you the board for Japanese Chess, which goes by the official name of Shogi!

    Chastity SVG Kanji Shogi Set.png

    It looks very fancy but unless you can read Japanese, these symbols probably make no sense to you. I can read them because I am experienced at playing Shogi enough in apps that force me to read their pieces. But for most people, the following image will make more sense.

    Chastity SVG Western Shogi Set.png

    Shogi is very much like Chess despite the difference in appearance. Shogi has pawns, kings, rooks, bishops, and knights. However, their some of their rules for movement are slightly different. However, the rook, bishop, and king are still identical to Western Chess.

    But there are new pieces, the Lance, the Silver General, and the Gold General. You need a tutorial on Shogi to learn how to play it. I may consider writing a tutorial later on but I have also been known to record videos on it and demonstrate how I play.

    Also, you can play Shogi anytime on lishogi.org. It allows you to choose either the traditional Japanese pieces like the first picture or the westernized pieces from the second picture.

    Xiangqi

    After you learn Chess and Shogi, I recommend Chinese Chess known as Xiangqi. You can learn and play it on xiangqi.com. Usually the game is played with pieces represented by Chinese Characters. However, many sites and programs allow you to select a westernized set similar to what was available for Shogi.

    chastity-svg-xiangqi-set.png

    You will find that Xiangqi is harder to learn because there are different rules for pawn movement depending on whether they have crossed the river. The game also has elephants which move two spaces diagonally but can never cross to the other side of the river. Because of this, you will find that the rooks, knights, and cannons are the important pieces.

    Cannons are actually one of the more bizarre pieces because nothing quite like them exists in Chess or Shogi. They move like a rook but cannot capture unless there is a piece in the way to jump over!

    I like Xiangqi almost as much as Chess and Shogi, but I am really bad it Xiangqi and I always lose because I am usually playing online against Chinese people who actually know how to play it well!

    After you learn the rules of Xiangqi, then you might want to play it on pychess. Pychess supports Chess, Shogi, and Xiangqi. It is probably the best site if you want to play the most variants possible.

    In the next chapter, I will be listing websites and which Chess variants they allow you to play. This chapter was merely a brief introduction so that you know that other games like Chess exist! I could never list them all, but I recommend at least learning Chess, Shogi, and Xiangqi. Once you know these three, then all other Chess variants will have similar rules to at least one of them.

  • Chapter 2: Chastity’s Recommended Openings

    For the sake of keeping this book short, I will not be trying to teach all details about chess notation. Part of this is because I don’t want to explain it wrong. However, all the major chess sites including lichess do keep track of the moves you play in every game and will show you the chess notation. It’s actually very easy to pick up just by looking at examples from your own games. I will be calling moves by their chess notation name but almost every move will also have a picture with it so that there will be no confusion as to what it means.

    White takes their turn first in the game of chess. This means that if you are playing as white, you have the unique opportunity to pick the first move that will set the course for the rest of the game! However, there are only a few moves that are considered to be very good. I will show you the two most popular choices that white players use to start the game.

    But first, I have an example image that shows the names of all the squares in chess notation.

    Chess_Coordinates_White.png

    That image has all the letters and numbers of each square from the white player’s perspective. Look back at this picture because it will help explain a lot of what I mean in the pages after it. The image has the letters in capitals because it looks cool, but when Chess notation is written, capital letters usually refer to which piece is moving while lowercase letters refer to the file (which vertical column a square is on). The numbers are which rank (horizontal row) the square is on. See more on the topic of chess notation in Chapter 7.

    Square e1 is where the white king starts the game and e8 is where the black king starts the game. Also look at squares f2 and f7 because those are the squares most vulnerable to attacks that put the king in check. Moving those pawns at the beginning of the game is asking for trouble! The most popular first move for white is e4 (white’s king pawn two squares forward).

    e4.png

    The main reason e4 is a popular move is because it allows white’s queen or bishop to get out on the next turn white plays. Most chess masters consider it to be the best move and it is also commonly played by chess engines. But it’s not the only popular move. The second is d4 (white’s queen pawn two squares forward)

    d4.png

    Moving this pawn to d4 is popular because it is the start of many different openings that involve getting the dark squared bishop out early in the game. This could be the start of the Queen’s Gambit, Trompowsky Attack, or the London System.

    But that isn’t to say there aren’t countless openings that begin with the first and most popular choice I mentioned earlier. If you are playing white, you should decide which of these moves to start with and then you should start with it every time until you get used to seeing how your opponent moves and how they respond to each of your moves. That’s not just my advice but is the advice of chess coach Levy Rozman (GothamChess) who I learned a lot from!

    Although studying openings is fun, don’t rely on them so much that you find yourself lost as soon as your opponent does something unexpected. That being said, you should probably have a plan for the first 4 moves at least. Planning ahead requires some experience of playing, winning, and losing games to see what worked and what didn’t.

    I find that I win my games more often when I start with e4, but I find myself having more fun when I play d4 as my first move and then try for the Queen’s Gambit, which is my favorite. I will be explaining the Queen’s Gambit opening later on but first I am going to show you the most generic ways to start the game. This will mostly be from white’s perspective but you will find that this method is flexible enough to be mirrored for both players.

    The Bishop’s Opening

    First, both white and black move their e file pawns two squares for their first move.

    e4-e5.png

    This is equally good for both of them because that allows both of them to get their bishops or queens moved out diagonally. Keep in mind that at the beginning of the game, diagonal moves are faster than orthogonal moves. The rooks can’t get out because the pawns in front of them are blocking their movement. For this reason, your early attacks will depend on bishops.

    e4-e5-Bc4-Bc5.png

    Next, the bishops come out. This means they are both attacking the weak f2 and f7 squares I mentioned earlier. This position is called the bishop’s opening for obvious reasons. If you find yourself in the bishop’s opening position, you have some serious options to consider. If you are playing white, you already have an advantage in this position because it is your turn. You could move the knight to f3 and attack the e5 pawn or you might want to move the queen to h5 and try a scholar’s mate. Keep in mind that the possible moves your opponent can do are endless and that to a certain extent, to show an example, I have to make up possible moves of only one of them just to prove the point I am showing. There is no way of knowing if you will end up in the mirrored bishop setup as shown in the previous image. With that being said, if you EVER DO find yourself in this exact position, I will show you some great possibilities that can come from it. I recommend knight to f3.

    e4-e5-Bc4-Bc5-Nf3.png

    Why is this position good for white, you may ask. That’s because this knight move accomplishes several things at once.

    1. It attacks the e5 pawn
    2. It gets the knight out of the way so the king can castle
    3. It prevents the black queen from going to h4 and trying to scholar’s mate white king on f2. Based on my experience, what usually happens after this is that black will move their queen’s pawn to d6 and defend the e4 pawn. Then white will do the reverse and move their queen pawn to d3.

    e4-e5-Bc4-Bc5-Nf3-d6-d3.png

    This also allows the bishops to move out that were previously blocked by those pawns. Black will most likely move the bishop to G4 and attack the knight.

    e4-e5-Bc4-Bc5-Nf3-d6-d3-Bg4.png

    This creates a problem for white because if they move the knight, the queen behind it will be captured. Because I value knights more than bishops, I recommend the following. After the bishop attacks the knight, sacrifice your bishop on f7 and put the king in check.

    e4-e5-Bc4-Bc5-Nf3-d6-d3-Bg4-Bf7.png

    You may wonder why we would sacrifice a bishop. The idea behind this is for the king to capture it so that we lure the king to where the knight can put it in check!

    e4-e5-Bc4-Bc5-Nf3-d6-d3-Bg4-Bf7-Kf7-Ng5.png

    At this point, the king is forced to move again. No matter where the king moves to, it will be white’s turn again and the white queen can capture the black bishop!

    e4-e5-Bc4-Bc5-Nf3-d6-d3-Bg4-Bf7-Kf7-Ng5-Ke8-Qg4.png

    At this point, white has lost a bishop but they have also taken a bishop and a pawn. This strategy of sacrificing pieces to gain an advantage is one of my favorite things to do. It highlights the importance of being able to plan ahead in chess. With that being said, I will next teach you my favorite opening for white, the Queen’s Gambit!

    The Queen’s Gambit

    The Queen’s Gambit sounds like a fancy name, and this name was used for a Netflix show as well. However, this opening was well known before people had televisions, computers, or the internet. The word “gambit” means sacrifice. In this opening white sacrifices a pawn with the hope of getting an advantage later. To some people, it also means a gamble because there is no way of knowing if it will work out the way you want depending on what your opponent does.

    The opening starts with each side moving the pawn in front of their queen. Then white moves the pawn on c2 to c4.

    d4-d5-c4.png

    In this position, black’s pawn can capture the white pawn and yet it doesn’t appear that white can capture it back, at least not yet. If it does take the pawn, this is known as accepting the gambit. New players will more likely than not take this pawn if they don’t see the trap.

    d4-d5-c4-dxc4-e4.png

    You see, the idea was to distract the pawn and move it away from the center so that white’s king pawn could move two squares forward. Also notice that the white bishop on f1 could also capture the black pawn on c4 next turn, but not so fast, first, black has to choose their next move. The only problem is that there really is no good way for black to stop white from taking their pawn with the bishop. If they try to protect it with another pawn, things can turn out badly. Sooner or later white will capture back the c4 pawn with the bishop and if black tries to stop it, they will only lose more pieces.

    My best advice is that if you accept the Queen’s Gambit, also accept that you will lose this pawn and don’t try to defend it by moving the b7 pawn to b5. This has never worked out well for my opponents. Do not let the sequence of the following images happen to you!

    d4-d5-c4-dxc4-e4-b5.png

    d4-d5-c4-dxc4-e4-b5-a4.png

    d4-d5-c4-dxc4-e4-b5-a4-a6.png

    d4-d5-c4-dxc4-e4-b5-a4-a6-xb5.png

    d4-d5-c4-dxc4-e4-b5-a4-a6-axb5-axb5.png

    d4-d5-c4-dxc4-e4-b5-a4-a6-axb5-axb5-Ra8.png

    I also want you to notice that the previous sequence of moves would still be just as bad if white had decided to move their king’s pawn only one space to e3. There are valid reasons they might do so to add extra protection to the d4 pawn. The d4 pawn is only protected by the queen right now so beware of this in all your games.

    If you are the black player, I would recommend against accepting the Queen’s Gambit entirely. It leads to many traps by white. If you do accept it, you will lose your pawn anyway. Don’t waste time with that and instead move out other pawns depending on what pieces you plan to move. Below are the two most common responses to the Queen’s Gambit.

    Queen’s Gambit Declined

    d4-d5-c4-e6.png

    Slav Defense

    d4-d5-c4-c6.png

    Both of these responses allow you to capture the white pawn back if it captures your d5 pawn. More importantly, you are getting pawns out of the way of your other pieces so that they can start attacking white. The Queen’s Gambit Declined is probably slightly better than the Slav Defense because moving the king’s pawn is just generally a great move because then black’s queen and dark squared bishop can move out diagonally and try to attack white.

    But a final note is that accepting or declining the Queen’s Gambit does not lose for black by any means, but accepting it allows white to get both of their center pawns and allows them to start moving both bishops out very quickly. White already has the advantage, don’t give them more help if you are the black player. But if you are the white player, I have plenty of advice on what to do. However I may have to add more to this book later.

    Now one thing you may have noticed is that the Queen’s Gambit started with moving the Queen’s Pawn (d4) instead of the King’s Pawn (e4) like in the previous example with the elaborate bishop sacrifice. Queen pawn openings are just far more fun to play because the game takes longer and my opponents get frustrated. e4 is better for quicker wins but is so cliché that I got tired of playing it and became a d4 player for my first move.

    The London System

    I am not the first person to say that the London System is a solid opening. In fact, it’s probably the best opening to teach a beginner for playing the white pieces. The first move will always be d4. The London System is actually quite different than the Queen’s Gambit because your goal is not an early attack nor sacrificing pieces. The goal is to build a defensive structure. Look at the following picture.

    7 move london white only.png

    It takes a total of 7 moves to achieve this setup but it can usually be done quite easily no matter what black does. If your opponent makes bad moves and you can capture their pieces then that should take priority over arranging the pieces like this picture. For example, if your opponent moves their king’s pawn two squares forward to e5, then just take it with your d4 pawn!

    d4-e5.png

    d4-e5-dxe5.png

    It’s totally easy to see how a player might be used to moving their king’s pawn two squares and might mistakenly let white’s d4 pawn take it. This completely disables black’s development besides costing them a pawn. They can’t move their knight to f6, nor can they move the pawn in front of their queen either one or two spaces (because of en passant rule). If black makes this mistake, then they already have a huge disadvantage. This is not like the Queen’s Gambit because there is no advantage to offering white a free pawn. If black does this, then take that pawn and then build the rest of the London Fortress even though there will be a missing pawn at the head of the pyramid of pawns. But most of the time, your opponent will not make a mistake as bad as the previous example. They will most likely do something smarter such as knight to f6.

    d4-nf6.png

    In this position, we see that the black knight is trying to prevent our king’s pawn from going to e4. That’s totally fine because that is not what we will do in the London system. We will continue to build our setup. In this position we should next move the bishop to f4.

    It’s worth mentioning that bishop to f5 would also be a good move, and would be called the Trompowsky attack. However, since I am teaching the London System, we will stick with bishop to f4 for now.

    d4-nf6-bf4.png

    Because of the fact that we have disabled the enemy king’s pawn from moving two squares, most players will instead move their queen’s pawn two squares instead. Remember, moving the pawns in front of the king or queen is almost always a good idea. With that in mind, our next move should be pawn to e3 because this is the next step in building the pawn pyramid, and it also adds an extra defender to the e4 pawn and Bishop.

    d4-nf6-bf4-d5-e3.png

    Keep in mind that this is still early in the game and that chess openings only take you so far. However, white has a really good winning chance in this setup. For example, black may try to offer the black version of the Queen’s Gambit by pawn to c5. However, doing so allows us to take their knight on b8!

    d4-nf6-bf4-d5-e3-c5-bxb8.png

    The rook can take our bishop but we have eliminated one of the enemy knights. You may be wondering, why sacrifice the bishop to take down a knight? The reason I do this is because in my experience, knights are better than bishops. Each chess player has different opinions on this, but here is my own reasoning on why knights are more powerful than bishops.

    1. Two knights can defend each other, unlike bishops which are always on different colored squares.
    2. Knight attacks cannot be blocked, they are therefore better for checkmating in many cases I have seen.
    3. Knights look like horses, which are my favorite animal. I prefer to protect my horses.

    Maybe you disagree with my advice. However, the main point is that to play the London System, you should get your pieces out similar to the picture of the 7 moves.

    All of what I have talked about so far is openings that white chooses to play. If you are the black player, what should you do? For one thing, you can expect that white will most likely play e4 for their first move, so I will next cover the French Defense.

    The French Defense

    The French Defense is my main opening when playing as the black player. I will make the case for why it deserves more credit as an opening even though it is less popular than the Caro Kann (which may be covered later)

    This is the start of the French Defense. White has moved king’s pawn to e4 and we are moving our king’s pawn only one square instead of the usual two.

    e4-e6.png

    I know it looks weird and uncomfortable to move a pawn only one square when it could have moved two, but the reason for this will become clear very soon.

    Almost all the time, white will move their queen’s pawn two squares and in this case you will copy them.

    e4-e6-d4-d5.png

    In this position, white has the option of capturing the d5 black pawn. If they take it, it is called the exchange variation of the French Defense. White will capture the pawn but then we capture it right back. Then the board will look like this.

    e4-e6-d4-d5-exd5-exd5.png

    As the black player, this is precisely what you wanted to happen because now the path is open for you to move either of your bishops or your queen out if you need to.

    The other alternative is when white does not take the pawn and instead advances it to e5.

    e4-e6-d4-d5-e5.png

    This is called the advanced variation of the French Defense, not because it is advanced in the sense of complicated but because the white pawn has advanced instead of capturing. When this happens, the best thing to do is to move a pawn to c5 and offer the “black queen’s gambit” and hope that white takes it so you can capture back with the bishop. From that point the game continues like normal and it follows much of the same logic as I use when I play the Queen’s Gambit.

    For example, the following sequence of images shows exactly how a checkmate can happen quickly if white does not defend the weak f2 square next to their king.

    e4-e6-d4-d5-e5-c5.png

    e4-e6-d4-d5-e5-c5-dxc5.png

    e4-e6-d4-d5-e5-c5-dxc5-Bxc5.png

    e4-e6-d4-d5-e5-c5-dxc5-Bxc5-Nf3.png

    e4-e6-d4-d5-e5-c5-dxc5-Bxc5-Nf3-Qb6.png

    e4-e6-d4-d5-e5-c5-dxc5-Bxc5-Nf3-Qb6-Nc3.png

    e4-e6-d4-d5-e5-c5-dxc5-Bxc5-Nf3-Qb6-Nc3-Bxf2+.png

    e4-e6-d4-d5-e5-c5-dxc5-Bxc5-Nf3-Qb6-Nc3-Bxf2+-Kd2.png

    e4-e6-d4-d5-e5-c5-dxc5-Bxc5-Nf3-Qb6-Nc3-Bxf2+-Kd2-Qe3.png

    Obviously, the game doesn’t always end this quickly but as you see the French Defense is based on the same logic as the Queen’s Gambit by offering a pawn with the hope of lining the bishop and the queen up to attack the weak square. At the least, this will put the king on the run, and sometimes even a checkmate if your opponent doesn’t defend correctly.

    In this chapter, I have shown my favorite openings to play. Don’t think that you know everything about how these will turn out for you in your games because the possibilities are infinite. You may find your own style and even invent a new opening no one has seen before!

    But the openings I have recommended are those that I have had the most success with and I have an advantage with them from practice. That’s why I am qualified to teach them. I also have videos on my YouTube channel where I have gone more in depth with them.

  • Chapter 1: The Basic Rules of Movement

    Hello, I am Chastity White Rose and I am a chess player. I am one of many people who love the game of chess because it is one of the best games for playing with other people and understanding how their mind works.

    The actual rules of chess are not very hard to learn. There are 6 types of pieces, and they have very specific rules of how they move that never change. Compared to the complexity of most video games that people play, chess is actually very simple because there is a lot less to learn and remember. If you have played Pokemon, Final Fantasy, or Tetris, then you are smart enough for chess!

    But chess is not specifically a video game. It’s a board game that has only recently turned into a video game because there are chess programs for every machine you can imagine. You can play from a regular Personal Computer or a Smart Phone these days and play with other people all over the world through the internet. Later on, I will talk about some of the best sites to play chess online.

    But first, a basic explanation of the goal of chess. The way to win the game of chess is to checkmate the opponent’s king. Checkmate means that you are attacking the king and it has nowhere to move to escape and would be captured on the next turn. I will show examples of what this looks like later on.

    For now, I intend to teach you the basic rules of how each piece moves by isolating them from the other pieces and highlighting the empty squares by coloring those squares in green. Just think “green means go,” as in a traffic light.

    Below is a picture of what the chessboard typically looks like if you are playing a computer chess program. This picture shows how the pieces are arranged. The chess set used is called Merida, and it is one of the piece sets available on lichess.org, where I play chess online.

    Chess_Start.png

    I will next explain the names of each of these pieces and how they move.

    The first piece that you will want to learn is the pawn. The pawns are the most abundant piece on the board, and each side (black and white) has 8 of them to start with. They only move in one forward direction (away from the side they started on)

    Chess_Pawn_Move.png

    Pawns can move one square forward, except that they can also move two spaces on their first move. Notice that the left pawn is in its starting position and has not moved yet. Because of this, it can move to either square in front of it highlighted in green, but only on this first move.

    Pawns capture other pieces differently than the way they move onto empty spaces. They capture only one space diagonally forward. Consider the following image:

    Chess_Pawn_Capture.png

    The white pawn can capture either of the two black pawns on the blue squares because they are diagonally one space in front. Notice that the white pawn cannot capture the pawn exactly one space in front. It can only move that way if the square is empty.

    The previous two pages contain everything you need to get started with moving pawns. There is another rule called en passant that I will cover later in the special rules at the end of this chapter because it is quite rare to see. The main thing right now is to learn how each piece moves. Also, I want to explain my convention of how I use color in this book.

    Chastity Chess Color Coding.png

    Green Squares are for empty spaces which a piece can move onto. I will use them as illustrations of how each piece moves.

    Blue squares are for showing when a piece can capture other pieces on those squares.

    Red squares may be later used to explain spaces that a king cannot move onto because he would be in check and could be captured. Remember, if the king is captured, then the game is over, and whoever captured him wins. I am also considering the use of red squares for examples of bad moves in future examples.

    Unlike the pawns which have a special capturing rule different than how they move onto other spaces, every other piece moves and captures the same way. So take comfort in knowing it gets easier from here once you understand pawns.

    For these next examples, I will show the movement rules using a single piece on the board and highlight all the squares in green where that piece can move.

    Chess_Rook_Move.png

    The rook moves orthogonally. That means it can move up/down and left/right as many squares as it wants. If there are any pieces on those squares, it captures the first one it hits and then stops.

    The bishop is the opposite of the rook because it moves diagonally.

    Chess_Bishop_Move.png

    Notice that because of this, a bishop can only move onto 32 of the 64 squares on the chess board and always remains on the same color as what it started on. Remember, all official chessboards have light and dark squares of the checkerboard pattern.

    Next, I will introduce my favorite chess piece. It is called the knight, but it actually looks like a horse. It moves in a way that is called hippogonally. As it turns out, hippo actually means horse, and the hippopotamus means river horse. The knight is called a knight because knights often rode horses in battle. In older chess versions, it was simply called a horse.

    The knight has an unusual form of hippogonal movement. It jumps over other pieces but in a shape that looks like an L Tetris block. It may seem odd to describe it, but I will have a picture on the next page that includes an example of how a knight moves. But before that, I want to give my answer to the ancient debate between chess players over whether the knight or the bishop is a more powerful piece. If you are going to lose one or the other, each player has their preference of which to protect.

    My personal opinion is that the knight is more valuable. It is not as easy to checkmate with as other pieces, but I protect mine religiously because it is the ONLY piece that can simultaneously attack 8 pieces at one time. Because this piece is special, I will have to show some examples later on of how to use it effectively.

    See the image below to get an example of all the places a knight can jump to. It can move to 8 spaces if it is near the center of the board. It moves 1 square orthogonally and then one square forward diagonally from that direction.

    Chess_Knight_Move.png

    This movement of jumping over other pieces is unique to the knight. Using it effectively is a challenge because it is harder for new players to visualize it. Consider coming back to this page for a visual reminder of it.

    The queen is the most powerful piece in the game because she has the combined powers of a rook and a bishop! See below the example of all the places that the queen can move to!

    Chess_Queen_Move.png

    As you might guess, the queen is what most people rely on to win the game because she is so powerful. Players try to avoid losing the queen. She may only be a single piece but can wipe out an army unless the opponent has a plan to stop her!

    The king is exactly like a queen, but it can only move one square in any of the 8 directions. It is also the most important piece that decides who wins or loses the game. If the king is being attacked and cannot move to a legal square, the player who owns the king loses the game.

    Chess_King_Move.png

    In this next image, we see that the white queen is directly next to the black king. The black king has only one empty square that it could move to, but the queen attacks that square too and would still capture the king. That means it is checkmate! The white player wins in this example.

    Chess_Checkmate_Example_1.png

    You may wonder why the king can’t simply capture the queen. That is because then the bishop would then capture the king. Two or more pieces can easily gang up on a king and then it is game over. There are times, however, when only one enemy piece can checkmate the king if that king is blocked by its pieces.

    Consider the following image of a checkmate that is shown from the black player’s perspective. If you are playing the black pieces, they will be closer to you. That is to simulate what it would look like from above on a real chessboard.

    Chess_Checkmate_Example_2.png

    In this picture, you can see that white moved two of its pawns, and black also moved its queen over so that it is in a direct diagonal direction from the king. This position is checkmate because the other white pieces block the white king from moving to a safe spot. It also cannot move anything in the way.

    This form of checkmate is called the fool’s mate. It only happens if the white player is being a fool and traps themselves. Normally, you would not want to move those pawns unless you had already given yourself an escape route or moved other pieces that could resist the queen’s attack. The fool’s mate is more common than you think, and I include it so that you don’t fall into it.

    Now you know all of the most important rules of chess to get started with. There are two more rules called castling and en passant. However, I think it is best to get started playing chess and then learn about those rare cases later on. In the next chapter, I plan to show examples of what your first moves might be to get the game started. You can choose any legal move while it is your turn in the game of chess, but some moves are more likely to be successful than others. The previous example of the fool’s mate shows what pawns you may not want to move right at the start of the game.

    For now, remember that you can get started playing chess today! To get started playing online, I recommend lichess, the world’s best free chess server with no ads. Go to the following link and there are interactive lessons that allow you to practice moving the chess pieces.

    https://lichess.org/learn

    In fact, the depth of learning tools they offer you is far beyond what I have included in this chapter. However, I wish to point you in the right direction to a site you can use that will not scare you away by telling you to buy a premium membership or show ads constantly advertising products like Viagra, Burger King sandwiches, or laundry detergent. Nothing is worse than being distracted when you are trying to learn the number one board game in the world.

    And on that note, that is precisely why I paid for an upgraded plan on my wordpress blogs for the purpose of removing ads. I want to teach chess without my students or followers exposed to anything I find unethical and that I don’t have control over.

    Playing chess online is a good way to get started because it is unlikely that you will have another person available 24/7 willing to play with you at a time that is convenient for you.

    Also, lichess does have a mobile app for cell phones, but I recommend starting on a regular desktop or laptop PC because using a mouse is much easier than tapping on a tiny cell phone screen. It can be done, but the chance of mistakes is higher. However, I have had great success playing on my iPad because it has a much larger screen size.

    Try practicing playing a few games and then continue to the next chapter to see my suggestions on starting moves to help you have a chance at winning more often.

    Also, if you find yourself liking the game of chess, I do recommend creating an account on lichess because then you can challenge anyone or add them as a friend. Lichess is not just a site for playing chess. Lichess is an entire social network that also keeps track of all your games so that you can look back and see what went wrong. You can also follow other players and add them to your friends list to challenge them to a game conveniently.

    Below is the link to my profile:

    https://lichess.org/@/chastitywhiterose

    Send me a challenge any time and I will respond when I am available. My challenge is to teach people about the game of chess and help them improve so that they can beat me. That way, even if I lose the game, I still win as a teacher.

    I will finish this chapter by explaining the en passant and castling rules. These tend to confuse new players. It does not help that they conflict with normal pawn and king movement as previously described.

    En Passant

    Because a pawn can move two squares on its first turn, there is a special rule called en passant, which allows capturing the opponent’s pawn AS IF it had moved only one. Consider the following picture. The black pawn just moved two squares from its starting position. The blue square is where the white pawn can move to and capture the pawn “in passing” (which is what “en passant” means in French).

    Chess_en_passant.png

    The idea is that the pawn would have captured the pawn while it was moving through that square. The En Passant rule helps compensate for the limitations of a turn-based game. This rule only applies to pawns and only on the turn immediately after a pawn has moved two squares on its last turn.

    Castling

    Remember when I said a king only moves one square at a time? Most of the time, this is true. Although this makes no sense, there is a rule that allows a king to move two squares in one turn. Consider the setup below.

    Chess_Castle_Setup.png

    Because there are no pieces in between the king and rooks and because the king and rooks have not moved in this game, they are allowed to do a one-time “castle” move where the king and the rook both move. The king moves two spaces towards the rook, and then the rook goes to the square the king skipped over!

    King side castle

    Chess_Castle_Right.png

    Queen side castle

    Chess_Castle_Left.png

    Don’t let these special rules confuse you too much. They are a bit nonsensical. In fact, I would compare them to the T spin triple rules in Tetris. On a related note, Tetris is actually a really good game, too. Tetris is my favorite video game, but it is not as easy to play as chess because Tetris requires quick reflexes and planning in mere seconds.

    Chess is more of a game for slow, careful thinkers. Although some play speed chess, I don’t recommend trying to play fast for beginners. Focus on the quality of moves rather than how many moves you can make in a minute. Also, play without time limits or choose reasonable time limits. I play 30-minute live games against other people online, and my rating for classical chess is higher than rapid, blitz, or bullet chess because I am slow to move and prefer to think and make the best move.

    Time limits are artificial inventions made for the convenience of society. Don’t rush through chess the same way everyone in society forces you to be fast and cause accidents in the real world. I work at Walmart, so I know what happens when employees are rushed. Products get put in the wrong spot, and injuries happen if people value only speed and forsake everything else.

    Chess, or any game for that matter, should be for fun, not as a job you do because someone else is forcing you to. No matter what, you must remember that!

  • Series Title: Will Chuck Find His Mate?

    Series Logline

    An autistic Chess player wants to teach Chess to people in his town, but his plans to generate interest in the game don’t work as expected. By hiring an actress, he succeeds at inspiring others to play Chess, but his social awkwardness and the prejudice of society may cause him to lose both his Chess business and the woman who fell in love with him.

    Overview

    This show follows Chuck as he tries to come out of his introverted shell in order to teach people Chess. He fears people, but he also wants to bring back his favorite game, even if it means going in public. This story turns into a Romantic Drama because Chuck gets the idea to hire a woman from a dating app to help him teach Chess. It starts as a business relationship but then turns into something else. Through this experience, Chuck overcomes some of his social inability but also shows he eventually succeeds in getting people excited about Chess.

    Concept

    This show stands out because to my knowledge, there isn’t anything like it because it is meant to teach people the rules of Chess but also show why it is enjoyable from a psychological point of view. The idea is that Chuck is a master of navigating pieces on a chessboard but that navigating the real world proves to be more challenging than any game of Chess. The show is meant to inspire introverted autistic people to share their passions while also showing neurotypicals an inside look at how an autistic person thinks. If the series fails to do that, the second hope is that it may inspire people to play Chess in a similar way that the Queen’s Gambit series on Netflix did. However, this is not based on that series because I have not watched it.

    Characters

    Chuck

    Chuck is a lonely single man who does not have much of a social life outside of playing Chess online and occasionally other multiplayer online role playing games. Because he seeks connection with real people, he tries to teach Chess to people. However, his social awkwardness and autistic brain cause most people to be suspicious of him, and they assume Chuck is dangerous. Chuck needs someone else to help him appear more normal in society.

    Chuck is afraid of people and, therefore, limits going out of his apartment in most cases. His world is entirely the internet. He is a computer programmer who has made several applications and games that provide him with a constant income. He works for himself because no company will hire him. Unfortunately, Chuck never even got his high school diploma because he was homeless in his teen years after being kicked out of his parent’s house.

    An unfortunate rumor spread by the boys at school resulted in his parents and teachers finding out he was gay. Therefore, he was expelled from school and disowned by his parents when he was 14 years old. He lived by himself in the woods until he was 18 and then managed to get a job as a janitor and live in a homeless shelter. Over the years, he used the internet to teach himself everything he wanted to know about computers, games, and religion.

    At the beginning of the story, he is 40 years old and has no friends or family. He thinks he will never have a family because Chuck has no relationship with his parents, and he doesn’t try to find a partner because he is too afraid of human contact because of the rejection of his parents and school. He is incredibly smart at Chess and Shogi and writes blog posts about strategies for winning these games. The comments he receives on his writing and videos help him to interact with people socially, but only from the safety of his computer in his studio apartment.

    Laura

    Laura is a hopeless romantic who has joined Tinder, hoping to find a future husband and live happily ever after. She has received many unwanted messages from men she is not interested in. However, Chuck’s message catches her attention because he is offering her a paid role as an actress to pretend to be interested in learning Chess. Thrilled at the idea of having the closest thing to a date so far and not being required to have sex with someone, she accepts.

    Laura is quite surprised that Chuck seems only interested in Chess and computer programming. Chuck is the first man she has met who does not make comments about the appearance of her body or request to have sex with her.

    Laura was raised in a “Christian” home until the age of 12 when her father raped her. She took this as a sign that her father was too hypocritical to be a follower of Jesus. Laura ran away from home and became rebellious and anti-religious. She survived by stealing food, lying, and later became a prostitute because she had no means to get a job or even finish high school. Laura used every means to obtain money regardless of morality. She had no identification documents, such as a birth certificate or social security card, because obtaining them would require parental consent. She refused to risk being raped by her father, so she never made any attempt to contact her family.

    When she turned 18, she contacted the police and Social Security Administration about obtaining her birth certificate and social security card. As a legal adult, she was able to get them without parental consent. She applied to various jobs but was always rejected because she was homeless and had no address. She lived on the streets and eventually got a job at a pizza shop. She was trained to make pizzas and take orders from customers. The owner understood her situation and let her work regardless of her homeless status. After some time of holding this job and having a stable income, she was able to rent a cheap studio apartment.

    Laura still wants to know what it would be like to have a family. She is still a member of Tinder from when she used to date men only for financial advantage, but she is looking for a future husband without much luck. That is why Laura was quite surprised when Chuck messaged her about Chess. Though she wasn’t sure where this would lead, this man was clearly different.

    Simon

    Simon is a young boy who does not fit in with other children. He usually talks about Minecraft, Pokemon, Final Fantasy, and other games to kids his age who would rather play in the dirt or play sports that he is not physically adept at performing. However, Simon likes to learn games requiring strategy and complex tactics using his mind rather than his body. For this reason, when he sees Chuck and Laura with a Chessboard, he wants to know what this game is about because he has never seen it.

    Simon is socially very awkward and has a habit of talking to strangers about video games, cartoons, his favorite stuffed animals, or whatever he is thinking about at the time. Children get annoyed by him, and adults tell his parents to get him checked for autism. He is only 9 years old, but he reads a lot of books and strategy guides for completing video games. His parents love him and tend to be very protective of him because he must be watched so he does not wander off with strangers and get kidnapped.

    His favorite place is the park because he likes to swing on the swing set and climb on the monkey bars. Most of the time, his mother or father stays at the park while reading a book and lets him play at the park for an hour or two after school. His life changes when he meets Chuck and Laura because they seem as trustworthy as his parents, and he wants to know what game they are playing. For some odd reason, Chuck explains the game to him in a way that he understands without trying to dumb it down and assume he can’t understand because he is a kid. This kind of respect is what Simon has wanted all his life.

    As much as Simon loves his parents, he does not always get along with them because the truth is that he is so intelligent at math and games that they never seem to know what he is talking about. His parents love him but don’t know what he is because it seems like he is from another world. What they don’t know is that Simon is an autistic savant who cannot perceive other people’s emotions. Simon can predict what his opponents will do in games because he has a photographic memory and can play movies in his head of anything he has seen before. He knows humans are quite predictable and expects them to behave the same way they have in the past.

    Locations

    Two main locations in this series are of interest. The first is Chuck’s studio apartment where he works on his computer programming projects and plays online Chess. Chuck has very few possessions, so he has a lot of space even though his apartment is small. The second location which we will see a lot is a local park where he goes to play Chess with Laura. The exact details of the park are mostly irrelevant but it must have a table where it is possible to place a chessboard. For shooting purposes, the audience would not even notice if the different episodes were shot at different parks as long as the design of the tables was similar.

    Episode Guide/Springboards

    1. Over the Board

    We see Chuck in his apartment with a chessboard and notebook. He has his chessboard set up nicely, but he has no one to play with. He walks around the table and plays each side as best as he can. He is notating the moves on paper so he can later replay them back. He becomes frustrated at the fact that he finds no challenge because he knows all of his moves and wants someone to play with. He packs up his chessboard and pieces into his backpack and sets on a quest to find someone in his town who knows how to play Chess.

    1. Nobody cares about Chess

    Chuck walks around town with only his large checkerboard-styled backpack, which also contains his real Chess set inside. He tries talking to people at the mall, grocery stores, the library, and even the local high schools and elementary schools. Much to his surprise, nobody knows how to play Chess. If they have heard of it at all, they say that they heard it was hard to learn. Chuck offers to teach everyone he meets, but people dismiss him because he just looks like a creepy 40-year-old man walking around with a backpack.

    1. Resignation and New Idea

    Chuck is frustrated trying to find someone to play Chess with and goes back home to play Chess online as he usually does every night. He wins all his games and yet finds that the experience is lacking. The most social interaction he gets is the occasional chat message saying, “Good Game”. He has a list of friends on chess.com and lichess.org, but they are usually far away, and he wants to play people over the real chessboard as he sees in the official tournament videos or friendly games between the famous YouTubers he watches. Finally, he gets the idea that if he wants to find someone local, he could try a dating app because they are designed for people to meet in the same area.

    1. Chuck joins Tinder

    Chuck had never used any dating apps before, so he downloaded Tinder because he had heard it was popular. He sets up a profile and scrolls through lots of people. Finally, he notices the profile of a woman named Laura, who says she loves walking in nature and reading books. He considers her as someone smart enough to be perhaps interested in Chess, so he messages her. Laura is surprised to receive a message from a stranger asking if she would like to play Chess at the park. At first, she declines because she has put her dating life on hold and prefers to be alone unless there is money involved. When Chuck replies and offers her 50 dollars if she can just meet him at the local park, she accepts because she needs the money.

    1. Why do you play Chess?

    Chuck and Laura are at the park. Chuck teaches Laura all the rules of Chess in less than 30 minutes. Surprised by how simple it is to learn, she asks Chuck why he has an interest in such a simple game. Chuck explains that Chess is the perfect board game because it is less complicated to learn but that the competition of two minds trying to outsmart each other is where all the challenge comes from. Chuck does not play games of chance and explains that he prefers to play a game where he wins not by getting lucky but by making the right moves. This information inspires philosophical discussions about video games, card games, and board games.

    1. The Beginning of Romance

    On multiple occasions, Chuck and Laura go to the park and sometimes shop at the mall. They talk for hours about books, games, movies, and music. Laura is continually surprised how no matter what the topic is, he somehow manages to turn it into a comparison to a Chess game he has played. She starts to see his point of view that life really is like a game of Chess because each move affects the next. During one of their Chess games at the park, some children come over to the table and ask about the game Chuck and Laura are playing. Chuck explains how the pieces move and what it means to checkmate the king. Laura sees that Chuck likes to teach children and wonders what he would be like as a father. She really likes Chuck now that she has known him for some time.

    1. The First Fight

    Laura asks Chuck if he has ever had children or any past relationships. He does not want to tell her the truth about his struggles in life and being a closeted gay person. Instead, he tells her that he is better off alone and that he was never looking for a romantic relationship but a way to springboard his business of teaching Chess. Laura does not take the news as well as he expected. She yells at him for leading her on all this time, and yet he is clueless because he had to pay her to even meet him the first time, and so he did not expect her to actually be interested in a relationship. Laura storms off and leaves Chuck alone with his autistic brain and Chess set wondering what he has done wrong to upset Laura.

    1. The Accusation

    Chuck still goes to the park with his chess set, cell phone, and book most days of the week. A boy named Simon, who is used to seeing Chuck with Laura, asks where Laura is. Chuck tells him that he and Laura fought, but he doesn’t know what he did wrong. Simon asks to play Chess with Chuck, and they have a lot of fun until Simon’s father, Dirk, comes along and tells Simon to get away from the stranger. Not knowing the context, Dirk reports to the police about a suspicious man at the park. The police also jump to false conclusions because of the high crime rate in the area. This results in the brief arrest of Chuck until someone comes along to prove that he is not a danger to children.

    Contact Information

    chastitywhiterose@gmail.com

    (816) 844-2077

    https://chastitychesschallenge.wordpress.com/

  • Chess should end in checkmate

    In this post, I will be sharing something that may be useful to players about the nature and reliability of Chess databases. This is a topic that I am studying deeply as a Chess coach. I will be using the open source program pgn-extract to assist me in sharing some stats about the most well known free database, Caissabase. I downloaded it through En Croissant. I have to say that both of these programs are free and open source. As a rule, I promote free and open source software because I believe that Chess should be free for all and I don’t believe someone needs to spend money on expensive Chess programs for analysis.

    Even in the largest Chess databases, very few games end in a checkmate. Because of this, it is necessary to extract only the ones that do end in checkmate because it is the proper way to win the game. The game ending because somebody ran out of time tells us nothing about the quality of the moves of that game.

    pgn-extract ../BigData/caissabase.pgn -ocheckmates_caissabase.pgn –checkmate

    For example, on my machine, the database called Caissabase is

    3.53 GB (3,791,607,570 bytes)

    After filtering to checkmates only with the previous command, the new size is

    190 MB (199,970,816 bytes)

    The final output of the pgn-extract command above was

    263966 games matched out of 5397923

    The reason I am sharing these stats is because it serves as evidence that most Chess databases suffer from several drawbacks.

    1. Players agree to draws to save time.
    2. Players lose when their clock runs out in time matches, even if they have a completely winning position.
    3. Players simply give up after they have lost their queen and have been known to resign even when there is a chance to win.

    Because of these 3 reasons. I recommend always filtering your reference databases to games ending in checkmates. In fact, aside from the fact that your analysis of games will be more reliable, this method can save a lot of disk space. For this reason, I have replaced Caissabase with the newer copy on my PC because I am sadly running out of space on this laptop. I expect this information will help people save disk space and also to get better data from the databases they use for analyzing games played both by themselves and also the famous Chess masters.

  • Chess Romance Story Premise

    Chuck, a lonely autistic man in a small town, loves to play Chess online but wants to play Chess over the board like he has seen in only online videos. However, no one else in his town knows how to play Chess. He decides that he will have to teach people this game. He disappointingly finds out that no one is interested in learning Chess. He decides to hire a random woman, Laura, on a dating app to pretend to be his Chess student and play with him at the park so that people can witness.

    At first, the woman is in it only for the money and doesn’t care about Chess. After a few days of playing, she sees why he loves the game. However, the children at the park have noticed the board game they are playing and ask to be taught. Chuck goes to the park with Laura once a week and teaches the rules of Chess to anyone who shows up.

    Laura sees how the children love Chuck as he teaches them the game. She thinks about how he would be a good father because of how he is with children. Over time, Laura begins to develop romantic feelings for Chuck, but he is only interested in Chess. When she says she wants to date him romantically, he declines and tells her that it was entirely a business relationship and that her services are no longer needed.

    Chuck continues going to the park by himself and teaches the children Chess. However, when a concerned parent reports to the police about a suspicious man who spends time with the children at the park, he is arrested. He is registered as a sex offender and branded as a pedophile by most people in the town even though he never did anything wrong, and there is no evidence to convict him. He loses his home, job, and everything that matters to him.

    When Laura finds out what has happened to Chuck, she goes to the police and tells them that they have made a mistake and arrested an innocent man for nothing. When she is questioned about how she knows him, she explains that Chuck is her Chess Coach and that he never caused harm to her or any children.

    Chuck is released from jail and thanks Laura for her honesty and for saving his reputation. When she asks him why he would not date her, Chuck explains that he is gay and doesn’t date women but that he fears homophobia if he spends time with a man in public. Laura explains that this experience shows that people will accuse people of doing something wrong, no matter what they do. She encourages Chuck not to let other people keep him from living the life he wants.

    Chuck and Laura get to know each other and eventually get married, despite only caring for each other emotionally and playing Chess together. They open a Chess school together and everyone understands both that Chess is a great game, and that Chuck is a good guy. People realize they were wrong to make false accusations against him.

  • How difficult is it to teach yourself to play chess?

    It is extremely easy at this time. With the number of free websites and tutorials, you can learn the basic rules of the game in less than 30 minutes. Additionally, you can listen to GothamChess on YouTube and Twitch. He is a good teacher and also published a book called “How to Win at Chess”.

    But learning Chess is not hard. If you have played Pokemon, Minecraft, or Monopoly, you will find Chess to be easier by comparison. There are only 6 pieces, and they have their own movement rules that are very simple.

    To start with, I recommend the tutorials here:

    https://lichess.org/learn

    This is probably the quickest way to get started playing Chess immediately. The best part is that Lichess is free and open source. You don’t have to spend even a cent to learn Chess today! Books and Chess courses are for people who already know how to play but want to learn advanced strategies and tips for making fewer mistakes.

  • Queen’s Gambit Accepted song and 3 perfect classical Chess wins!

    This was one of the most fun Chess streams I have ever had on Twitch. I presented 3 different songs and won all 3 Chess games that I played.

    I started the episode with introducing the song I just wrote for a 13 move checkmate trap involving the Queen’s Gambit Accepted.

    But that’s not the only notable thing that happened in the stream. I had a total of 5 different viewers and 2 new followers within the hour and 45 minutes I was streaming. I also won all 3 Chess games I played. It was the best stream I have ever had on Twitch since I joined.

    — Watch the next live stream at https://www.twitch.tv/chastitywhiterose

    I can’t promise when I will be streaming next. I live with my mom and it is hard to run a schedule when she needs my help and demands my attention at random times.

    But the day will someday come when I can have a scheduled time for streaming. Until then, just follow me and set notifications on your PC or phone to be notified when I go live.

  • Chastity’s Chess Challenge: Manifesto of Chess Equality

    My name is Chastity White Rose. That is not my legal name but it is the name I chose for myself to describe who I am. I will expand on this later. The purpose of this blog post is to explain in full detail what my Chess teaching business is and what the goals are. I will be known as the Chess Coach for the LGBTQIA community as well as those with ADHD, autism, or any other disability.

    The reason for this is that most of the great Chess masters who are capable of teaching very well, including my favorite, Levy Rozman, are much too busy and don’t have the patience or experience I do at understanding people with differences often misunderstood by the public.

    But I am autistic and transgender. I understand the LGBTQIA community extremely well. I also know that autistic people have unique talents that can be brought out with the right teacher. Some of us are really good at math. Others are good with words but can’t do math at all! Some of us can’t talk, while others never shut up! However, I believe that there is something about the game of Chess that is specifically good for autistic people because it allows us to use our minds in a way that is void of expectations of human society.

    Different people are like different Chess pieces that move in different ways. The loss of even a few pieces can cause a player to lose the game in the end. Therefore, Chastity’s Chess Challenge is about teaching Chess to those people who may otherwise never learn. We live in a time where people have all heard of Chess and yet so few people play it because a lot of money is spent on promoting the latest video game or movie to children. While I am a supporter of movies, video games, books, and all forms of entertainment for children and adults, I also believe that we forget the days when people played simple board and card games with friends back when we didn’t have television, computers, or even electricity!

    When I was in my twenties, I played Chess with older adults at the Gamber Center in Lees Summit. That’s when I learned that despite the differences in age and life experience, we were all complete equals in the game of Chess. We were equals because any of us could win. Chess isn’t a game where some people are always going to be superior. All that really matters is the time and dedication to improving. But more important than that is the fact that Chess is fun because you never know what will happen.

    I would also like to explain why I use the Progress Flag as part of my logo. The idea is that the Progress Flag represents people of all kinds, including those who are gay, transgender, and of different skin colors. Some people wildly misinterpret the image as me saying that Chess has something to do with being gay. The point is that people who are gay or transgender do not need to be afraid of me because I am one of them. I never want someone to be afraid of Chess just because they see only famous players who are cisgender straight white males. The world is tired of only one demographic of people getting the spotlight in Chess.

    Chess is a way of fighting back against a world that judges by appearance and financial status. In the game of Chess, the poor can win against a billionaire, the women can win against the men, and gender identity, sexual orientation, and skin color will not cause you to win or lose. In this way, I find that Chess is perfect because no personality is assigned to the chess pieces themselves. It is a game played by humans using shaped pieces that don’t resemble humans.

    What I do for my teaching business is that I record videos and I write about Chess in the hope of inspiring people to get into this game they have heard of but never had someone to teach them! I also can set up one-on-one sessions either online or locally to anywhere in Lees Summit that I can walk to! That is what Chastity’s Chess Challenge is about. I only have so much time to dedicate to it now, but when I graduate from college, I expect to be much more active!

  • Chastity’s Checkmates of 2024

    This post is a collection of chess games in PGN format of all the games I won in by checkmate 2024 that started with either the French Defense or Queen's Gambit.

    It's important to note that this list only includes games that end in a checkmate. Most of my wins are from my opponent resigning or running out of time, even if they might have still otherwise won. Filtering games only to checkmate endings improves the general quality of the games.

    Also, only lichess.org wins are included because I promote that platform because it is free and open source. They also allow for conveniently downloading all of my games from my profile.

    I plan to do a post like this once per year as a permanent archive of the games I have won for convenient reference.

    First, here are the games where I played white with the Queen's gambit.

    [Event "Casual correspondence game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/cQG9aW36"]
    [Date "2024.12.24"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Black "lichess AI level 4"]
    [Result "1-0"]
    [WhiteElo "1722"]
    [BlackElo "?"]
    [ECO "D31"]
    [TimeControl "-"]
    [UTCDate "2024.12.24"]
    [UTCTime "11:08:07"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 Bb4 4. Qa4+ Nc6 5. cxd5 Qxd5 6. Qxb4 Qd8 7. Qa4
    Nf6 8. e3 h6 9. Nf3 Bd7 10. Bd2 a6 11. Bd3 Ne7 12. Qa3 a5 13. Ne5 O-O 14.
    O-O-O Bc6 15. f3 Qd6 16. Nxc6 bxc6 17. Qxd6 cxd6 18. Ne4 Ned5 19. Nxf6+
    gxf6 20. e4 Nc7 21. Bxh6 Rfd8 22. h4 e5 23. dxe5 fxe5 24. h5 Ne6 25. f4 Kh7

    f5 Nd4 27. Bg5 Rg8 28. Be7 Rae8 29. Bxd6 a4 30. Rh2 Rg5 31. Rg1 Rg4 32.
    Kd2 Kg7 33. h6+ Kh7 34. Bc5 Rb8 35. Bxd4 exd4 36. e5 Rxb2+ 37. Kc1 Rb7 38.
    e6 Rg3 39. Rh3 fxe6 40. fxe6+ Rg6 41. Bxg6+ Kxg6 42. h7 Rxh7 43. Rxh7 Kxh7

    e7 Kg6 45. e8=Q+ Kg5 46. Qxc6 a3 47. Qd5+ Kf4 48. Qxd4+ Kg3 49. Qd3+
    Kf2 50. Qf1+ Kg3 51. Rh1 Kg4 52. Qf3+ Kg5 53. Qxa3 Kf4 54. Rh4+ Ke5 55. Qa4
    Kf6 56. Qa5 Ke6 57. Rh6+ Kd7 58. Qa7+ Kc8 59. Qg7 Kb8 60. a4 Ka8 61. a5 Kb8

    a6 Ka8 63. Qa1 Ka7 64. Rh7+ Kb6 65. a7 Kb5 66. Rc7 Kb6 67. Rc2 Kb5 68.
    Qb1+ Ka5 69. a8=Q# 1-0

    [Event "Casual correspondence game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/0pXlsnsP"]
    [Date "2024.12.24"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Black "lichess AI level 4"]
    [Result "1-0"]
    [WhiteElo "1722"]
    [BlackElo "?"]
    [ECO "D06"]
    [TimeControl "-"]
    [UTCDate "2024.12.24"]
    [UTCTime "03:21:30"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 Nf6 3. Nc3 c5 4. dxc5 Nc6 5. cxd5 Nb4 6. e4 Nc6 7. Bb5 Qd7

    Nf3 e6 9. Ne5 Nxe5 10. Bxd7+ Kd8 11. Bxc8 Kxc8 12. Bg5 Ng6 13. dxe6 a6

    f4 h6 15. Bxf6 gxf6 16. exf7 Kb8 17. g3 Ka7 18. Qd4 Be7 19. Nd5 Rad8

    c6+ Bc5 21. Qxc5+ Ka8 22. cxb7+ Kb8 23. Qc7+ Ka7 24. Qb6+ Kb8 25. Qxa6
    Rxd5 26. exd5 h5 27. f5 Ne5 28. Qa8+ Kc7 29. Rc1+ Kd7 30. Qxh8 Nxf7 31.
    b8=N+ Ke7 32. Rc7+ Kd6 33. Rc6+ Kxd5 34. Qxf6 Nd6 35. Qxd6+ Ke4 36. O-O Ke3

    Qe7+ Kd2 38. Rd6+ Kc2 39. Rf2+ Kc1 40. Qe1# 1-0

    [Event "Rated classical game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/PyMVaByU"]
    [Date "2024.12.22"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Black "Federico0723"]
    [Result "1-0"]
    [WhiteElo "1595"]
    [BlackElo "1700"]
    [ECO "D10"]
    [TimeControl "1800+0"]
    [UTCDate "2024.12.22"]
    [UTCTime "14:33:40"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]
    [WhiteRatingDiff "+7"]
    [BlackRatingDiff "-32"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 c6 3. h3 Nf6 4. Bf4 Nbd7 5. e3 e6 6. Nf3 Be7 7. Nbd2 O-O 8.
    Bd3 Nb6 9. Qc2 Bd6 10. Ne5 Nbd7 11. Ndf3 Nh5 12. Bxh7+ Kh8 13. Bg5 f6 14.
    Ng6+ Kxh7 15. Nxf8+ Kg8 16. Qh7+ Kxf8 17. Qh8+ Ke7 18. Qxh5 fxg5 19. Nxg5
    Kf6 20. f4 Nf8 21. Qf7# 1-0

    [Event "Rated classical game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/E5vp0ez0"]
    [Date "2024.12.20"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Black "GabrielSB20"]
    [Result "1-0"]
    [WhiteElo "1566"]
    [BlackElo "1542"]
    [ECO "D30"]
    [TimeControl "1800+0"]
    [UTCDate "2024.12.20"]
    [UTCTime "20:15:21"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]
    [WhiteRatingDiff "+6"]
    [BlackRatingDiff "-6"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 Bb4+ 4. Bd2 a5 5. Ne5 Nf6 6. a3 Bxd2+ 7. Nxd2 Ne4

    Ndf3 O-O 9. e3 Nd7 10. Bd3 Nxe5 11. dxe5 b6 12. cxd5 Qxd5 13. Qc2 Nc5

    Bxh7+ Kh8 15. h4 Ba6 16. Rd1 Qc4 17. Qd2 Kxh7 18. Rc1 Qb5 19. Ng5+ Kg8

    b4 Nb3 21. Qc2 Nxc1 22. Qh7# 1-0

    [Event "Casual correspondence game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/IxWXIGwl"]
    [Date "2024.12.19"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Black "redsparkles111"]
    [Result "1-0"]
    [WhiteElo "1740"]
    [BlackElo "1351"]
    [ECO "D06"]
    [TimeControl "-"]
    [UTCDate "2024.12.19"]
    [UTCTime "02:16:27"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 b5 3. cxb5 c6 4. bxc6 Nxc6 5. e3 e5 6. Bb5 Qa5+ 7. Nc3 Bb4

    Bxc6+ Ke7 9. Ne2 Bg4 10. f3 Bh5 11. O-O Rc8 12. Nxd5+ Kd8 13. Bb7 Bg6

    e4 Nf6 15. Bxc8 Nxe4 16. fxe4 Kxc8 17. Nxb4 Qxb4 18. Qc2+ Kd8 19. dxe5
    Re8 20. Bg5+ Kd7 21. Rfd1+ Ke6 22. Qc6+ Kxe5 23. Qxe8+ Qe7 24. Qxe7# 1-0

    [Event "Rated classical game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/ee7wthJp"]
    [Date "2024.11.28"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Black "Viktor-555"]
    [Result "1-0"]
    [WhiteElo "1574"]
    [BlackElo "1553"]
    [ECO "D21"]
    [TimeControl "1800+0"]
    [UTCDate "2024.11.28"]
    [UTCTime "15:58:47"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]
    [WhiteRatingDiff "+6"]
    [BlackRatingDiff "-5"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 dxc4 3. Nf3 Bg4 4. Ne5 Be6 5. Nc3 b6 6. e4 f6 7. Qh5+ Bf7 8.
    Qxf7# 1-0

    [Event "Rated classical game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/l3Sa1aKW"]
    [Date "2024.11.23"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Black "faer-e"]
    [Result "1-0"]
    [WhiteElo "1548"]
    [BlackElo "1587"]
    [ECO "D08"]
    [TimeControl "1800+0"]
    [UTCDate "2024.11.23"]
    [UTCTime "01:54:52"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]
    [WhiteRatingDiff "+8"]
    [BlackRatingDiff "-33"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 e5 3. dxe5 d4 4. Nf3 Bc5 5. e3 Nc6 6. Bd3 Qe7 7. exd4 Nxd4

    Nc3 c6 9. O-O Bg4 10. Bg5 f6 11. exf6 Nxf6 12. Re1 Ne6 13. Bxf6 Qxf6 14.
    h3 Bh5 15. g4 Bg6 16. Ne4 Qxb2 17. Nxc5 O-O 18. Nxe6 Rxf3 19. Qxf3 Bf7 20.
    Bxh7+ Kxh7 21. Qxf7 a5 22. Rab1 Qxa2 23. Qxg7# 1-0

    [Event "Rated rapid game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/eeYaTDxc"]
    [Date "2024.11.17"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Black "Iamabadplayer369"]
    [Result "1-0"]
    [WhiteElo "1506"]
    [BlackElo "1482"]
    [ECO "D20"]
    [TimeControl "900+0"]
    [UTCDate "2024.11.17"]
    [UTCTime "07:17:16"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]
    [WhiteRatingDiff "+7"]
    [BlackRatingDiff "-9"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 dxc4 3. e4 b5 4. a4 c6 5. axb5 cxb5 6. Qf3 Bb7 7. d5 Nd7 8.
    Nc3 a6 9. Nh3 h6 10. g4 e6 11. g5 h5 12. g6 fxg6 13. Ng5 Ne5 14. Qf4 Bd6

    Nxe6 Qe7 16. Ng5 Nd3+ 17. Bxd3 Bxf4 18. Bxf4 cxd3 19. Kd2 Qf6 20. Ne6
    Qxe6 21. dxe6 Rd8 22. Bg5 Rd7 23. exd7+ Kxd7 24. Kxd3 Ne7 25. Rhd1 Ke6 26.
    f4 Rf8 27. Rf1 Rd8+ 28. Ke3 Rf8 29. Rad1 b4 30. Bxe7 Kxe7 31. Nd5+ Ke6 32.
    Nxb4 a5 33. Nd5 Kf7 34. f5 g5 35. f6 g6 36. e5 g4 37. Kf4 Ke6 38. Nc7+ Kf7

    Kg5 Rc8 40. e6+ Kf8 41. Rd7 Bc6 42. e7+ Kf7 43. e8=Q# 1-0

    [Event "Casual rapid game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/RsXMP0Zm"]
    [Date "2024.11.13"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Black "Kobato1986"]
    [Result "1-0"]
    [WhiteElo "1512"]
    [BlackElo "1500"]
    [ECO "D06"]
    [TimeControl "600+0"]
    [UTCDate "2024.11.13"]
    [UTCTime "05:02:05"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 Nf6 3. Nc3 Nc6 4. Nf3 g5 5. Bxg5 h6 6. Bf4 Ne4 7. Nxd5 e6 8.
    Nxc7+ Qxc7 9. Bxc7 Bb4+ 10. Nd2 Bxd2+ 11. Qxd2 Nxd2 12. Kxd2 Nxd4 13. e3
    Nf5 14. g4 Nh4 15. Be5 f6 16. Bxf6 Rf8 17. Bxh4 e5 18. Rd1 e4 19. Kc3 Bxg4

    Rd4 Bf5 21. Bg2 Rg8 22. Bxe4 Be6 23. Bxb7 Rc8 24. Bxc8 Bxc8 25. Rd8+
    Kf7 26. Rxg8 Kxg8 27. Rg1+ Kf7 28. b4 a6 29. a4 Bd7 30. a5 Ba4 31. f4 Bd7

    e4 Ke6 33. Rg6+ Kf7 34. Rxh6 Kg7 35. Rxa6 Bc8 36. Ra7+ Kf8 37. Ra8 Ke8

    Rxc8+ Kd7 39. Rd8+ Ke6 40. a6 Kf7 41. a7 Kg6 42. a8=Q Kh5 43. Rh8+ Kg4

    Bg5 Kf3 45. e5+ Ke3 46. Rh3+ Ke2 47. Qg2+ Ke1 48. Re3+ Kd1 49. Qg1# 1-0

    [Event "Rated classical game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/0CMYUcKc"]
    [Date "2024.11.10"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Black "freakshot"]
    [Result "1-0"]
    [WhiteElo "1496"]
    [BlackElo "1587"]
    [ECO "D20"]
    [TimeControl "1800+0"]
    [UTCDate "2024.11.10"]
    [UTCTime "09:00:56"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]
    [WhiteRatingDiff "+9"]
    [BlackRatingDiff "-7"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 dxc4 3. e4 e6 4. Bxc4 Nf6 5. Bg5 Be7 6. e5 Nd5 7. Bxe7 Qxe7

    Qf3 c6 9. Ne2 Qb4+ 10. Nd2 Qxb2 11. Rb1 Qc2 12. Bb3 Qg6 13. Ne4 Nd7 14.
    Nd6+ Ke7 15. O-O c5 16. Bxd5 exd5 17. Qxd5 Rd8 18. Nf4 Qxd6 19. exd6+ Kf8

    dxc5 Nf6 21. Qg5 Ne4 22. Qxd8# 1-0

    [Event "Casual correspondence game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/RPdBs36a"]
    [Date "2024.11.06"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Black "lichess AI level 4"]
    [Result "1-0"]
    [WhiteElo "1672"]
    [BlackElo "?"]
    [ECO "D07"]
    [TimeControl "-"]
    [UTCDate "2024.11.06"]
    [UTCTime "04:06:02"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 Nc6 3. Nc3 Nf6 4. Bg5 dxc4 5. Bxf6 exf6 6. Nf3 Bb4 7. a3
    Bxc3+ 8. bxc3 Qd5 9. e3 O-O 10. Qc2 Bf5 11. Qa2 Be6 12. Nd2 Qa5 13. Rc1 b5

    Be2 Ne7 15. O-O Nd5 16. Ne4 f5 17. Nc5 Nxc3 18. Rxc3 a6 19. Rfc1 Ra7

    Nxe6 fxe6 21. a4 Rb7 22. Bxc4 bxc4 23. Qxc4 Rf6 24. d5 exd5 25. Qh4 Rh6

    Qd8+ Kf7 27. Rxc7+ Qxc7 28. Rxc7+ Rxc7 29. Qxc7+ Ke6 30. Qxg7 Rg6 31.
    Qxh7 Rg4 32. Qh6+ Ke7 33. Qxa6 Rc4 34. Qb7+ Kf6 35. g3 Kg5 36. h4+ Kg6 37.
    a5 f4 38. exf4 Rc1+ 39. Kg2 Re1 40. Qxd5 Rc1 41. a6 Kf6 42. a7 Kg7 43. a8=Q
    Rc5 44. Qxc5 Kg6 45. Qa6+ Kg7 46. Qb7+ Kh8 47. Qcc8# 1-0

    [Event "Rated rapid game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/yP303GBZ"]
    [Date "2024.10.27"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Black "fedor0f"]
    [Result "1-0"]
    [WhiteElo "1503"]
    [BlackElo "1571"]
    [ECO "D06"]
    [TimeControl "600+3"]
    [UTCDate "2024.10.27"]
    [UTCTime "07:02:19"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]
    [WhiteRatingDiff "+9"]
    [BlackRatingDiff "-121"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 Nf6 3. Nc3 Be6 4. cxd5 Bxd5 5. Bg5 h6 6. Bxf6 exf6 7. e4 Bc6

    d5 Bd7 9. Qb3 b6 10. Bc4 c6 11. dxc6 Nxc6 12. Bxf7+ Ke7 13. O-O-O Na5

    Qd5 Bc6 15. Qe6# 1-0

    [Event "Casual correspondence game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/B8ryzNXt"]
    [Date "2024.10.25"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Black "lichess AI level 1"]
    [Result "1-0"]
    [WhiteElo "1698"]
    [BlackElo "?"]
    [ECO "D06"]
    [TimeControl "-"]
    [UTCDate "2024.10.25"]
    [UTCTime "07:51:41"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 Nf6 3. cxd5 Nxd5 4. e4 Nb4 5. Bc4 Bd7 6. Qb3 Nc2+ 7. Qxc2
    Nc6 8. Qb3 Qc8 9. Bxf7+ Kd8 10. Nf3 Rb8 11. O-O b6 12. d5 Qb7 13. dxc6 Qa8

    cxd7 Rb7 15. Bd5 c6 16. Bxc6 g6 17. Qf7 Bh6 18. Bxh6 a6 19. Bg5 Rb8 20.
    Qxe7+ Kc7 21. Bxa8 a5 22. d8=Q# 1-0

    [Event "Rated classical game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/3Cmm21bs"]
    [Date "2024.10.16"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Black "Maxim_888"]
    [Result "1-0"]
    [WhiteElo "1496"]
    [BlackElo "1565"]
    [ECO "D20"]
    [TimeControl "1800+0"]
    [UTCDate "2024.10.16"]
    [UTCTime "14:30:46"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]
    [WhiteRatingDiff "+9"]
    [BlackRatingDiff "-7"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 dxc4 3. e4 e5 4. Bxc4 exd4 5. Nf3 Nc6 6. Ng5 Nh6 7. Qh5 Bb4+

    Bd2 Bxd2+ 9. Nxd2 O-O 10. O-O Bg4 11. Bxf7+ Nxf7 12. Qxh7# 1-0

    [Event "Casual correspondence game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/NwyFxj3a"]
    [Date "2024.09.06"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Black "lichess AI level 2"]
    [Result "1-0"]
    [WhiteElo "1725"]
    [BlackElo "?"]
    [ECO "D30"]
    [TimeControl "-"]
    [UTCDate "2024.09.06"]
    [UTCTime "07:53:07"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 e6 3. c5 c6 4. Bd2 b6 5. b4 Nf6 6. Nc3 a5 7. b5 bxc5 8. bxc6
    Ba6 9. e4 Nxe4 10. Nxe4 dxe4 11. Bxa6 Nxc6 12. Bb7 Nb4 13. Bxa8 e3 14. Qa4+
    Nc6 15. Bxc6+ Ke7 16. Bxe3 g6 17. dxc5 h5 18. Nf3 Rh7 19. Ne5 f6 20. Nxg6+
    Kf7 21. Be4 Rg7 22. Qc2 f5 23. Ne5+ Ke7 24. Nc6+ Kf7 25. Nxd8+ Ke7 26.
    O-O-O Rg4 27. Bf3 Kf6 28. Bxg4 Bd6 29. cxd6 a4 30. Bxh5 e5 31. Qxa4 e4 32.
    d7 Ke5 33. f4+ exf3 34. gxf3 f4 35. Qxf4# 1-0

    [Event "Casual correspondence game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/UHCGqXVm"]
    [Date "2024.09.05"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Black "lichess AI level 1"]
    [Result "1-0"]
    [WhiteElo "1725"]
    [BlackElo "?"]
    [ECO "D20"]
    [TimeControl "-"]
    [UTCDate "2024.09.05"]
    [UTCTime "05:14:37"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 dxc4 3. e4 Nf6 4. Bxc4 Nxe4 5. Qf3 Qxd4 6. Qxf7+ Kd7 7. Qf5+
    Kc6 8. Bb5+ Kd6 9. Bf4+ Qe5 10. Bxe5+ Kc5 11. Qxc8 Kb4 12. Bxc7 Nc5 13.
    Bxb8 Rg8 14. Nc3 b6 15. a3+ Ka5 16. b4# 1-0

    [Event "Casual correspondence game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/ZguXFC0V"]
    [Date "2024.07.14"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Black "Judena"]
    [Result "1-0"]
    [WhiteElo "1679"]
    [BlackElo "1500"]
    [ECO "D07"]
    [TimeControl "-"]
    [UTCDate "2024.07.14"]
    [UTCTime "03:36:54"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 Nc6 3. Nf3 Qd6 4. c5 Qf6 5. Bg5 Qf5 6. h4 h5 7. e3 Nb4 8.
    Qa4+ Nc6 9. b4 b5 10. Bxb5 Qg4 11. Ne5 Qxg2 12. Bxc6+ Bd7 13. Bxd7+ Kd8 14.
    Nxf7# 1-0

    [Event "Rated rapid game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/Nvd6Fg5H"]
    [Date "2024.07.12"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Black "Marsiqi"]
    [Result "1-0"]
    [WhiteElo "1373"]
    [BlackElo "1369"]
    [ECO "D30"]
    [TimeControl "600+0"]
    [UTCDate "2024.07.12"]
    [UTCTime "07:11:59"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]
    [WhiteRatingDiff "+13"]
    [BlackRatingDiff "-8"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 e6 3. c5 c6 4. Nf3 Nf6 5. Bf4 Nbd7 6. e3 b6 7. b4 b5 8. a4
    bxa4 9. Qxa4 Be7 10. Qxc6 Rb8 11. Bxb8 O-O 12. Rxa7 Ne4 13. Bc7 Nxf2 14.
    Bxd8 Bh4 15. g3 Bxg3 16. hxg3 Ne4 17. Rxd7 Nxg3 18. Qxc8 Rxd8 19. Rxd8# 1-0

    [Event "Casual correspondence game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/wmmFxPw6"]
    [Date "2024.07.09"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Black "Judena"]
    [Result "1-0"]
    [WhiteElo "1687"]
    [BlackElo "1500"]
    [ECO "D20"]
    [TimeControl "-"]
    [UTCDate "2024.07.09"]
    [UTCTime "01:47:52"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 dxc4 3. e4 Nc6 4. Bxc4 Nxd4 5. Qh5 Nc2+ 6. Ke2 Nxa1 7. Qxf7+
    Kd7 8. Be6+ Kd6 9. Bf4+ Kc5 10. b4+ Kxb4 11. Bd2+ Kb5 12. Nc3+ Kc5 13. Bxc8
    Qxc8 14. Qd5+ Kb6 15. Qb5# 1-0

    [Event "Casual correspondence game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/jm7IzZhF"]
    [Date "2024.05.16"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Black "lichess AI level 1"]
    [Result "1-0"]
    [WhiteElo "1704"]
    [BlackElo "?"]
    [ECO "D08"]
    [TimeControl "-"]
    [UTCDate "2024.05.16"]
    [UTCTime "10:51:01"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 e5 3. dxe5 dxc4 4. Qxd8+ Kxd8 5. Bg5+ f6 6. exf6 gxf6 7. Bh4
    a5 8. e4 Be6 9. e5 Bb4+ 10. Nc3 Ke7 11. a3 Na6 12. axb4 Nxb4 13. O-O-O b6

    exf6+ Ke8 15. Nf3 Ra7 16. Nd4 Bf7 17. Re1+ Kf8 18. g4 Nd3+ 19. Kd2 Nc5

    Nc6 Ra6 21. g5 Be6 22. Bg3 Nb3+ 23. Ke3 Nc5 24. Bxc7 Ke8 25. h4 b5 26.
    Nxb5 Nb3 27. Nd6+ Kd7 28. Nb8+ Kxc7 29. Nxa6+ Kc6 30. Nxc4 Kb7 31. Nd6+ Ka8

    Bg2+ Bd5 33. Bxd5+ Ka7 34. Bxb3 Kxa6 35. Bxg8 Ka7 36. f7 Kb6 37. f8=Q
    Kc5 38. Nf7+ Kc4 39. Nxh8+ Kb5 40. Bxh7 Ka6 41. Bd3+ Ka7 42. Rc1 Kb6 43.
    Qd6+ Ka7 44. Rc7+ Ka8 45. Qd8# 1-0

    Next, here are the times I was playing as black and won after the Queen's Gambit. There were only 3 times I won by checkmate as black.

    [Event "Rated classical game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/2JnRtX8V"]
    [Date "2024.12.22"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "mikayilux"]
    [Black "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Result "0-1"]
    [WhiteElo "1628"]
    [BlackElo "1589"]
    [ECO "D30"]
    [TimeControl "1800+0"]
    [UTCDate "2024.12.22"]
    [UTCTime "14:13:58"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]
    [WhiteRatingDiff "-44"]
    [BlackRatingDiff "+6"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 e6 3. cxd5 Qxd5 4. Nc3 Bb4 5. Nf3 Nf6 6. Bf4 Ne4 7. Qd3 Na6

    a3 Bxc3+ 9. bxc3 O-O 10. e3 f6 11. c4 Qa5+ 12. Nd2 f5 13. Be2 Nb4 14.
    Qb3 Nxd2 15. Kxd2 Nd5+ 16. Kd1 Nc3+ 17. Kd2 Ne4+ 18. Kd1 Qd2# 0-1

    [Event "Rated rapid game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/evkdxbC2"]
    [Date "2024.11.27"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "rtfmNull"]
    [Black "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Result "0-1"]
    [WhiteElo "1413"]
    [BlackElo "1491"]
    [ECO "D31"]
    [TimeControl "600+0"]
    [UTCDate "2024.11.27"]
    [UTCTime "08:35:33"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]
    [WhiteRatingDiff "-4"]
    [BlackRatingDiff "+5"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 Bb4 4. Qa4+ Nc6 5. Bd2 Bd7 6. cxd5 Nxd4 7. Qxb4
    Nc2+ 8. Kd1 Nxb4 9. Ne4 Nxd5 10. Nc5 Bb5 11. Nxb7 Qd7 12. Nc5 Qc6 13. Nb3
    O-O-O 14. e4 Nb4 15. Bxb5 Qc2+ 16. Ke2 Qxb2 17. Nf3 c6 18. Bc4 Nc2 19. Rab1
    Qxa2 20. Nbd4 Nxd4+ 21. Nxd4 Qxc4+ 22. Ke3 Qxd4+ 23. Kf3 Qxd2 24. Rbd1
    Qxd1+ 25. Rxd1 Rxd1 26. Kf4 a5 27. Ke5 a4 28. f4 a3 29. g4 a2 30. f5 a1=Q+

    Kf4 Rf1+ 32. Kg5 h6+ 33. Kh4 Qb2 34. fxe6 Qxh2# 0-1

    [Event "Rated classical game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/roF0FRcr"]
    [Date "2024.05.07"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "AlbertDripstein"]
    [Black "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Result "0-1"]
    [WhiteElo "1708"]
    [BlackElo "1669"]
    [ECO "D06"]
    [TimeControl "1800+0"]
    [UTCDate "2024.05.07"]
    [UTCTime "23:53:31"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]
    [WhiteRatingDiff "-74"]
    [BlackRatingDiff "+11"]

    d4 d5 2. c4 Bf5 3. Nf3 Bxb1 4. Rxb1 c6 5. g3 Qa5+ 6. Bd2 Qxa2 7. Bg2
    Qxc4 8. O-O e6 9. Ne5 Qxd4 10. Nxf7 Kxf7 11. e3 Qe5 12. f4 Qc7 13. Qh5+ g6

    Qg5 Be7 15. Qg4 Nf6 16. Qg5 Ne4 17. Qg4 Nxd2 18. f5 Nxf1 19. fxe6+ Kg7

    Qf3 Rf8 21. Rxf1 Rxf3 22. Rxf3 Na6 23. Bh3 h5 24. Rf7+ Kh6 25. g4 Rf8

    gxh5 Rxf7 27. exf7 gxh5 28. Be6 Bf8 29. Kf2 Nc5 30. Bxd5 cxd5 31. Kf3
    Qxf7+ 32. Kg3 Bd6+ 33. Kh4 Ne4 34. h3 Bg3# 0-1

    And finally, the next list is the games where I was playing as black with the French Defense.

    [Event "Rated classical game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/04bjug20"]
    [Date "2024.12.31"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "ShanmukhSiddharth"]
    [Black "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Result "0-1"]
    [WhiteElo "1655"]
    [BlackElo "1597"]
    [ECO "C02"]
    [TimeControl "1800+0"]
    [UTCDate "2024.12.31"]
    [UTCTime "09:18:43"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]
    [WhiteRatingDiff "-176"]
    [BlackRatingDiff "+5"]

    e4 e6 2. d4 d5 3. e5 c5 4. dxc5 Bxc5 5. Nc3 Qb6 6. Be3 d4 7. Bxd4 Bxd4

    Qd2 Nc6 9. O-O-O Bd7 10. Nd5 Qxb2# 0-1

    [Event "Rated rapid game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/ZHudmlIc"]
    [Date "2024.12.31"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "Ghiath1"]
    [Black "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Result "0-1"]
    [WhiteElo "1523"]
    [BlackElo "1489"]
    [ECO "C01"]
    [TimeControl "600+0"]
    [UTCDate "2024.12.31"]
    [UTCTime "08:42:46"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]
    [WhiteRatingDiff "-6"]
    [BlackRatingDiff "+6"]

    e4 e6 2. d4 d5 3. exd5 exd5 4. Qe2+ Be6 5. Nf3 Nf6 6. g3 Bb4+ 7. Bd2 a5

    a3 Bd6 9. Bh3 Ne4 10. Nc3 Bxh3 11. Nxe4 dxe4 12. Qxe4+ Be6 13. Qxb7 Qe7

    Qxa8 Bd5+ 15. Kd1 Bxa8 16. Re1 Be4 17. Ng1 O-O 18. f3 f5 19. fxe4 fxe4

    Bxa5 Nc6 21. Bc3 Rf2 22. d5 Nd8 23. Re2 e3 24. Nh3 Rf1+ 25. Be1 Bc5 26.
    Rc1 Qd7 27. c4 Qxh3 28. Rcc2 c6 29. b4 Bd4 30. d6 Qd7 31. c5 Ne6 32. Rc4
    Bf6 33. Rxe3 Nd4 34. a4 Qg4+ 35. Kd2 Bg5 36. Rc3 Bxe3+ 37. Rxe3 Qg5 38. d7
    Rxe1 39. Kxe1 Qxe3+ 40. Kd1 Ne6 41. Kc2 Qd4 42. a5 Qxd7 43. Kb3 Qd3+ 44.
    Ka4 Qc2+ 45. Ka3 Nd4 46. a6 Qb3# 0-1

    [Event "Rated rapid game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/V60T4owA"]
    [Date "2024.12.24"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "jebenipsiholog"]
    [Black "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Result "0-1"]
    [WhiteElo "1497"]
    [BlackElo "1476"]
    [ECO "C01"]
    [TimeControl "600+0"]
    [UTCDate "2024.12.24"]
    [UTCTime "08:18:14"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]
    [WhiteRatingDiff "-6"]
    [BlackRatingDiff "+7"]

    e4 e6 2. d4 d5 3. exd5 Qxd5 4. Nc3 Bb4 5. a3 Qe4+ 6. Qe2 Bxc3+ 7. bxc3
    Nf6 8. Bg5 Qxe2+ 9. Bxe2 Ne4 10. Bd2 b6 11. f3 Nxd2 12. Kxd2 O-O 13. Re1
    Rd8 14. Nh3 c5 15. Kd3 e5 16. Rd1 exd4 17. cxd4 Rxd4+ 18. Kc3 Nc6 19. Nf4
    Rxf4 20. Bb5 Bb7 21. Rd6 Rf6 22. Rd7 g6 23. Rxb7 Nd4 24. Ba4 Ne2+ 25. Kd2
    Nd4 26. c3 Nf5 27. g4 Rd8+ 28. Rd7 Rd6+ 29. Rxd6 Rxd6+ 30. Kc1 Ne3 31. Re1
    Nc4 32. Re7 Nxa3 33. Rxa7 b5 34. Bd1 b4 35. cxb4 cxb4 36. Kb2 Rxd1 37. Kb3
    Rb1+ 38. Ka2 b3+ 39. Kxa3 Ra1+ 40. Kxb3 Rxa7 41. Kc4 Ra2 42. Kd4 Rxh2 43.
    Ke4 Rh3 44. Kf4 f5 45. gxf5 gxf5 46. Kxf5 Rxf3+ 47. Kg4 Rf1 48. Kg5 Rg1+

    Kh6 Rh1+ 50. Kg5 h5 51. Kf4 h4 52. Kg4 h3 53. Kg3 h2 54. Kg2 Ra1 55.
    Kxh2 Ra3 56. Kg2 Kg7 57. Kf2 Kg6 58. Ke2 Kf5 59. Kd2 Ke4 60. Kc2 Kd4 61.
    Kb2 Rh3 62. Kc2 Kc4 63. Kd2 Kd4 64. Ke2 Ke4 65. Kf2 Rb3 66. Ke2 Rb2+ 67.
    Kf1 Kf3 68. Ke1 Ke3 69. Kd1 Rh2 70. Kc1 Kd3 71. Kb1 Kc3 72. Ka1 Kb3 73. Kb1
    Rh1# 0-1

    [Event "Casual correspondence game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/bptm0uhv"]
    [Date "2024.12.19"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "redsparkles111"]
    [Black "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Result "0-1"]
    [WhiteElo "1351"]
    [BlackElo "1740"]
    [ECO "C15"]
    [TimeControl "-"]
    [UTCDate "2024.12.19"]
    [UTCTime "02:47:08"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]

    e4 e6 2. d4 d5 3. Nc3 Bb4 4. a3 Ba5 5. Nf3 dxe4 6. Nh4 Qxh4 7. Bb5+ c6

    Be2 Nf6 9. g3 Qh3 10. Rg1 Qxh2 11. Rf1 b5 12. Bf4 Nbd7 13. a4 b4 14.
    Nxe4 Nxe4 15. f3 b3+ 16. Qd2 Bxd2+ 17. Kd1 bxc2+ 18. Kxc2 Nxg3 19. Rad1
    Bxf4 20. Rf2 Qxf2 21. Rf1 Qxe2+ 22. Kb3 Rb8+ 23. Ka2 Qxb2# 0-1

    [Event "Casual correspondence game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/i71Lluok"]
    [Date "2024.12.19"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "redsparkles111"]
    [Black "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Result "0-1"]
    [WhiteElo "1351"]
    [BlackElo "1740"]
    [ECO "C00"]
    [TimeControl "-"]
    [UTCDate "2024.12.19"]
    [UTCTime "01:12:41"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]

    e4 e6 2. d3 d5 3. e5 c5 4. c4 dxc4 5. g4 cxd3 6. h4 c4 7. Bg5 Bb4+ 8.
    Nd2 Qa5 9. Rc1 f6 10. Be3 fxe5 11. a3 Bxd2+ 12. Bxd2 Qc5 13. b4 Qd4 14. Be3
    Qe4 15. Rxc4 Qxh1 16. Bxd3 Qxg1+ 17. Kd2 Qh2 18. Rxc8+ Kd7 19. Bb5+ Kxc8

    Qc1+ Nc6 21. Qxc6+ bxc6 22. Bxc6 Rb8 23. Bg5 h6 24. Be3 Ne7 25. Be4
    Rd8+ 26. Kc1 Qg1+ 27. Kc2 Nd5 28. Bxa7 Rb7 29. Bc5 Rc7 30. Bxd5 Rxd5 31. f4
    Qd1+ 32. Kc3 Rd3+ 33. Kb2 Qe2+ 34. Kc1 Rxa3 35. f5 Ra1# 0-1

    [Event "Rated classical game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/DVV1kXOM"]
    [Date "2024.12.15"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "kompot35"]
    [Black "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Result "0-1"]
    [WhiteElo "1674"]
    [BlackElo "1555"]
    [ECO "C00"]
    [TimeControl "1800+0"]
    [UTCDate "2024.12.15"]
    [UTCTime "17:49:53"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]
    [WhiteRatingDiff "-205"]
    [BlackRatingDiff "+5"]

    e4 e6 2. Nf3 d5 3. exd5 exd5 4. d4 a6 5. Bd3 c5 6. dxc5 Bxc5 7. Qe2+ Be6

    Be3 d4 9. Bg5 Qa5+ 10. Bd2 Qb6 11. O-O Nc6 12. b4 Bd6 13. c3 dxc3 14.
    Bxc3 Nf6 15. b5 axb5 16. Bxb5 O-O-O 17. Bxc6 bxc6 18. Bd4 c5 19. Bc3 Rhe8

    Qb2 Qc7 21. Nbd2 Bd5 22. Rfe1 Rxe1+ 23. Rxe1 Ng4 24. Nf1 Bxf3 25. Ne3
    Bxh2+ 26. Kf1 Nxe3+ 27. fxe3 Bd5 28. Qb5 Bc6 29. Qa6+ Bb7 30. Qe2 Qd6 31.
    Qg4+ Kb8 32. Rd1 Ba6+ 33. Kf2 Qxd1 34. Qxd1 Rxd1 35. g4 Rf1+ 36. Kg2 Bg1

    Be5+ Ka8 38. Bxg7 Bxe3 39. a4 Rf2+ 40. Kg3 Bb7 41. Kh4 f6 42. a5 Bg5+

    Kg3 Rf3+ 44. Kg2 Ra3+ 45. Kf2 Rxa5 46. Bxf6 Bxf6 47. Ke3 Ra3+ 48. Kd2
    c4 49. g5 Bxg5+ 50. Kc2 Be4+ 51. Kb2 Rb3+ 52. Ka1 Bf6+ 53. Ka2 Rb2+ 54. Ka1
    Rh2# 0-1

    [Event "Rated rapid game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/g4tbDqBd"]
    [Date "2024.11.27"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "Mo19999999"]
    [Black "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Result "0-1"]
    [WhiteElo "1502"]
    [BlackElo "1481"]
    [ECO "C00"]
    [TimeControl "600+0"]
    [UTCDate "2024.11.27"]
    [UTCTime "08:47:41"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]
    [WhiteRatingDiff "-6"]
    [BlackRatingDiff "+6"]

    e4 e6 2. Nf3 d5 3. d3 c5 4. e5 Qb6 5. Nc3 Ne7 6. Be3 d4 7. Na4 Qa5+ 8.
    c3 dxe3 9. fxe3 Bd7 10. d4 Bxa4 11. Qe2 cxd4 12. exd4 Nf5 13. Qe4 Nc6 14.
    Nd2 O-O-O 15. Nc4 Qd5 16. Qg4 Be7 17. Bd3 Bh4+ 18. Kd2 Nfxd4 19. cxd4 g5

    Nd6+ Kc7 21. Nxf7 Qa5+ 22. Ke3 Rxd4 23. Qxe6 Bf2+ 24. Kxf2 Qd2+ 25. Be2
    Rf4+ 26. Kg3 Qe3+ 27. Bf3 Nd4 28. Qd6+ Kc8 29. Rac1+ Nc6 30. Nxh8 h5 31.
    Qe6+ Kc7 32. Qd6+ Kb6 33. Rxc6+ Bxc6 34. Qb4+ Rxb4 35. a3 Qf4+ 36. Kf2
    Rxb2+ 37. Ke1 Qc1+ 38. Bd1 Ba4 39. Kf1 Qxd1# 0-1

    [Event "Rated classical game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/6FFsdaNH"]
    [Date "2024.11.26"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "EazyM"]
    [Black "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Result "0-1"]
    [WhiteElo "1554"]
    [BlackElo "1569"]
    [ECO "C00"]
    [TimeControl "1800+0"]
    [UTCDate "2024.11.26"]
    [UTCTime "08:41:47"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]
    [WhiteRatingDiff "-6"]
    [BlackRatingDiff "+6"]

    e4 e6 2. c3 d5 3. exd5 exd5 4. Qa4+ Bd7 5. Qb3 Nf6 6. Qxb7 Bc6 7. Bb5
    Qe7+ 8. Ne2 Bxb5 9. Qxa7 Qxe2# 0-1

    [Event "Rated classical game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/QU5hIKVY"]
    [Date "2024.11.24"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "mustafaoner"]
    [Black "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Result "0-1"]
    [WhiteElo "1539"]
    [BlackElo "1570"]
    [ECO "C02"]
    [TimeControl "1800+0"]
    [UTCDate "2024.11.24"]
    [UTCTime "09:50:25"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]
    [WhiteRatingDiff "-11"]
    [BlackRatingDiff "+6"]

    e4 e6 2. d4 d5 3. e5 c5 4. Nf3 Nc6 5. Bb5 Bd7 6. O-O Nge7 7. Ng5 cxd4 8.
    Bxc6 Nxc6 9. Qf3 Nxe5 10. Qf4 Bd6 11. Qxd4 f6 12. Ne4 Bc7 13. Nbc3 O-O 14.
    Ng3 Bb6 15. Qd1 Bc6 16. Bf4 Nc4 17. Qg4 e5 18. Nh5 g6 19. Bg3 f5 20. Bh4
    Qd6 21. Qg3 f4 22. Qg5 Bd8 23. Qg4 Bxh4 24. Qxh4 gxh5 25. Qxh5 d4 26. Rad1
    Qg6 27. Qe2 Qxg2# 0-1

    [Event "Rated classical game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/TZTFBxwL"]
    [Date "2024.11.10"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "Antonuzel"]
    [Black "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Result "0-1"]
    [WhiteElo "1492"]
    [BlackElo "1489"]
    [ECO "C00"]
    [TimeControl "1800+0"]
    [UTCDate "2024.11.10"]
    [UTCTime "08:44:46"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]
    [WhiteRatingDiff "-6"]
    [BlackRatingDiff "+7"]

    e4 e6 2. d4 c5 3. c3 Nc6 4. Nf3 Nf6 5. Bg5 Qb6 6. Qb3 cxd4 7. Qxb6 axb6

    Bxf6 gxf6 9. cxd4 d5 10. exd5 exd5 11. Bb5 Rg8 12. O-O Bh3 13. Nh4 Kd8

    Nc3 Nxd4 15. Rad1 Nf3+ 16. Nxf3 Bxg2 17. Rxd5+ Kc7 18. Rd7+ Kc8 19. Re1
    Bxf3+ 20. Kf1 Bg2+ 21. Ke2 Bb4 22. Kd2 Rxa2 23. Kd3 Rxb2 24. Rxf7 Bxc3 25.
    Kxc3 Rxb5 26. Rxf6 Rc5+ 27. Kb4 Rg4+ 28. Kb3 Bd5+ 29. Kb2 Rb4+ 30. Ka3 Rb3+

    Ka4 Ra5# 0-1

    [Event "Casual correspondence game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/7v4QDhYC"]
    [Date "2024.09.26"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "lichess AI level 4"]
    [Black "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Result "0-1"]
    [WhiteElo "?"]
    [BlackElo "1742"]
    [ECO "C16"]
    [TimeControl "-"]
    [UTCDate "2024.09.26"]
    [UTCTime "07:16:56"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]

    e4 e6 2. d4 d5 3. Nc3 Bb4 4. e5 f6 5. Nf3 c5 6. Qd2 cxd4 7. Qxd4 Nc6 8.
    Bb5 Bxc3+ 9. bxc3 a6 10. Bxc6+ bxc6 11. Be3 fxe5 12. Nxe5 Nf6 13. O-O Qc7

    Rab1 O-O 15. Rb6 c5 16. Qd1 Qxb6 17. h3 Ne4 18. Qb1 Qd6 19. c4 Qxe5 20.
    Qa1 Qxa1 21. Rxa1 d4 22. f3 Ng3 23. Bf2 Ne2+ 24. Kh2 e5 25. Re1 Nc3 26.
    Rxe5 Nxa2 27. Kg3 Nb4 28. Rh5 Nxc2 29. Rg5 Be6 30. Rxc5 a5 31. h4 a4 32.
    Bg1 a3 33. Rc7 a2 34. Rc6 Rf6 35. Bxd4 Rg6+ 36. Kh2 Nxd4 37. h5 Rf6 38. Rc7
    a1=Q 39. h6 Rxh6+ 40. Kg3 Qe1+ 41. Kf4 Rh4+ 42. Kg5 h6+ 43. Kg6 Qg3# 0-1

    [Event "Rated rapid game"]
    [Site "https://lichess.org/vAL1Exm4"]
    [Date "2024.08.25"]
    [Round "?"]
    [White "amir1358306"]
    [Black "chastitywhiterose"]
    [Result "0-1"]
    [WhiteElo "1405"]
    [BlackElo "1376"]
    [ECO "C00"]
    [TimeControl "900+5"]
    [UTCDate "2024.08.25"]
    [UTCTime "12:12:29"]
    [Variant "Standard"]
    [Termination "Normal"]
    [WhiteRatingDiff "-6"]
    [BlackRatingDiff "+19"]

    e4 e6 2. Bc4 d5 3. Bb3 dxe4 4. Nc3 Nf6 5. f3 exf3 6. Nxf3 Bb4 7. a3 Bxc3

    bxc3 O-O 9. d4 b6 10. Be3 Bb7 11. Qe2 Ne4 12. Qd3 a5 13. Bc4 Qd6 14. Bb5
    f5 15. Bc4 f4 16. Bd2 Nxd2 17. Qxd2 Bxf3 18. gxf3 Nc6 19. O-O-O Qxa3+ 20.
    Kb1 Rad8 21. Bxe6+ Kh8 22. Rhg1 Ne5 23. Qg2 Ng6 24. Rd3 Rd6 25. Bc4 Rf5 26.
    h4 b5 27. Qg4 bxc4 28. Qxf5 Rb6+ 29. Qb5 Rxb5# 0-1

    One of the benefits of posting this on my blog is that I have a convenient reference of games that I can access from any device in the world even if I am not logged in. It also allows people to go to the link and replay the games on lichess.