hypernormie
Only the truth is beautiful.
- Joined
- Nov 19, 2022
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Now I've been dabbling in Chess the past few months because I don't have much else to do.
One thing however has been bothering me about the game and I've had a hard time putting my finger on what exactly it was.
Well I've figured it out.
Chess is a game that penalizes aggression, ambition and active efforts to undermine your opponent. It's a game that fundamentally rewards passivity, defensive behavior and stagnation.
In chess the better player is not the player who tried to win the hardest, it's the player who tries the hardest to not lose.
This creates a dynamic where the best approach to every game in chess is to simply sit back and wait for your opponent to make a mistake. Now this may be obvious to you chess players out there but it wasn't to me and now that I'm aware of it, I don't like it.
I made a post a while back about how chess felt super autistic and now I understand what exactly is autistic about it. It's the fact that to be very good at chess is mostly about being autistically focused on minimizing risks and error prevention rather than on maximizing strength and leverage.
Idk what this says about me, well actually I do, it's pretty obvious. My disposition is too active to really enjoy this style of game. Being patient, waiting around, refusing to act is super foreign to me and while chess has taught that there is some power/virtue to the negative action or the refusal to do anything, and that there are more ways to win in life than simply going directly for the victory, this is fundamentally not something I enjoy.
So I will be looking for other board games now that reward my disposition.
I already have a few in mind...
One thing however has been bothering me about the game and I've had a hard time putting my finger on what exactly it was.
Well I've figured it out.
Chess is a game that penalizes aggression, ambition and active efforts to undermine your opponent. It's a game that fundamentally rewards passivity, defensive behavior and stagnation.
In chess the better player is not the player who tried to win the hardest, it's the player who tries the hardest to not lose.
This creates a dynamic where the best approach to every game in chess is to simply sit back and wait for your opponent to make a mistake. Now this may be obvious to you chess players out there but it wasn't to me and now that I'm aware of it, I don't like it.
I made a post a while back about how chess felt super autistic and now I understand what exactly is autistic about it. It's the fact that to be very good at chess is mostly about being autistically focused on minimizing risks and error prevention rather than on maximizing strength and leverage.
Idk what this says about me, well actually I do, it's pretty obvious. My disposition is too active to really enjoy this style of game. Being patient, waiting around, refusing to act is super foreign to me and while chess has taught that there is some power/virtue to the negative action or the refusal to do anything, and that there are more ways to win in life than simply going directly for the victory, this is fundamentally not something I enjoy.
So I will be looking for other board games now that reward my disposition.
I already have a few in mind...
