what people dont realize is that soccer is insanely high iq sport due to the complexity that exceeds chesses exponentially

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how tactically complex is soccer? i think its more complex than chess, and chess already has more possible games than atoms in the universe.


That’s a really interesting comparison—and you’re not wrong to feel that soccer can be more tactically complex than chess, even though the complexity is a different kind.


Let’s break it down carefully.




1. Chess complexity (the baseline you mentioned)​


Chess is combinatorially complex:


  • Average branching factor: ~35 legal moves per position
  • Typical game length: ~80 plies (half-moves)
  • Estimated number of possible games (Shannon number): ~10¹²⁰
  • That number is famously greater than the estimated number of atoms in the observable universe (~10⁸⁰)

But chess has key constraints:


  • Discrete turns
  • Perfect information
  • Fixed board and pieces
  • No randomness or physical execution limits

This makes chess computationally massive, but structurally clean.




2. Soccer’s complexity is fundamentally different​


Soccer is continuous, real-time, multi-agent, imperfect-information complexity.


a) Continuous action space​


In soccer:


  • Players can move in any direction, at any speed, at any moment
  • Passes have infinite variations (angle, pace, spin, timing)
  • Decisions aren’t turn-based—they overlap constantly

This alone makes the “number of possible game states” essentially uncountable, not just astronomically large.




b) 22 independent decision-makers​


At any moment:


  • 22 players are making decisions simultaneously
  • Each player’s choice affects the available options of all others
  • Tactical meaning emerges from interactions, not individual moves

Chess has:


  • 1 decision-maker at a time
  • Zero simultaneous action

This makes soccer closer to real-time strategy games, swarm systems, or fluid dynamics than board games.




c) Tactical layers in soccer​


Soccer tactics operate on multiple time scales at once:


  • Micro (milliseconds): body orientation, first touch, pressing triggers
  • Meso (seconds): overloads, rotations, counter-pressing shapes
  • Macro (minutes): fatigue, scoreline management, psychological momentum
  • Meta (weeks/months): scouting, opponent-specific game plans

In chess, all tactics collapse into the same decision framework.




3. Why soccer may be “more complex” than chess​


It depends what you mean by complex:


If you mean calculable complexity → chess wins​


Chess has more countable permutations.


If you mean decision complexity under uncertainty → soccer wins​


Soccer includes:


  • Imperfect information
  • Physical execution limits
  • Noise, fatigue, injuries, weather
  • Referees and rule interpretation
  • Psychological effects

No chess engine has to worry about slipping, mis-hitting a pass, or misreading an opponent’s run.




4. Why AI proves your intuition​


Important insight:


  • Chess has been “solved” at superhuman levels by brute-force + evaluation
  • Soccer has not been solved tactically, even approximately

Why?


  • Continuous space
  • Massive state-action space
  • Coordination problems among many agents
  • Learning must generalize, not calculate

This is why robotic soccer and football analytics are still orders of magnitude behind chess engines, despite far more computing power.




5. A useful analogy​


  • Chess is like a massive decision tree
  • Soccer is like a turbulent fluid system with intelligent particles

Both are complex—but soccer’s complexity is:


  • Emergent
  • Non-enumerable
  • Context-dependent
  • Never repeatable in exactly the same way



Bottom line​


Your intuition is defensible and shared by many analysts:


Chess is more computationally countable; soccer is more tactically complex.

Chess complexity comes from quantity of possibilities.
Soccer complexity comes from quality of interaction.


If you want, I can also:


  • Compare soccer to Go instead of chess
  • Break down complexity by specific tactical systems (pressing, buildup, transitions)
  • Talk about why humans still outperform AI tactically in soccer

Just say the word.
 
  • +1
  • JFL
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CrapGPT
 
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Ballon d'or winner is harder to achieve than GM tbh
 
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  • JFL
Reactions: _MVP_ and ltnbrownacnecel
how tactically complex is soccer? i think its more complex than chess, and chess already has more possible games than atoms in the universe.


That’s a really interesting comparison—and you’re not wrong to feel that soccer can be more tactically complex than chess, even though the complexity is a different kind.


Let’s break it down carefully.




1. Chess complexity (the baseline you mentioned)​


Chess is combinatorially complex:


  • Average branching factor: ~35 legal moves per position
  • Typical game length: ~80 plies (half-moves)
  • Estimated number of possible games (Shannon number): ~10¹²⁰
  • That number is famously greater than the estimated number of atoms in the observable universe (~10⁸⁰)

But chess has key constraints:


  • Discrete turns
  • Perfect information
  • Fixed board and pieces
  • No randomness or physical execution limits

This makes chess computationally massive, but structurally clean.




2. Soccer’s complexity is fundamentally different​


Soccer is continuous, real-time, multi-agent, imperfect-information complexity.


a) Continuous action space​


In soccer:


  • Players can move in any direction, at any speed, at any moment
  • Passes have infinite variations (angle, pace, spin, timing)
  • Decisions aren’t turn-based—they overlap constantly

This alone makes the “number of possible game states” essentially uncountable, not just astronomically large.




b) 22 independent decision-makers​


At any moment:


  • 22 players are making decisions simultaneously
  • Each player’s choice affects the available options of all others
  • Tactical meaning emerges from interactions, not individual moves

Chess has:


  • 1 decision-maker at a time
  • Zero simultaneous action

This makes soccer closer to real-time strategy games, swarm systems, or fluid dynamics than board games.




c) Tactical layers in soccer​


Soccer tactics operate on multiple time scales at once:


  • Micro (milliseconds): body orientation, first touch, pressing triggers
  • Meso (seconds): overloads, rotations, counter-pressing shapes
  • Macro (minutes): fatigue, scoreline management, psychological momentum
  • Meta (weeks/months): scouting, opponent-specific game plans

In chess, all tactics collapse into the same decision framework.




3. Why soccer may be “more complex” than chess​


It depends what you mean by complex:


If you mean calculable complexity → chess wins​


Chess has more countable permutations.


If you mean decision complexity under uncertainty → soccer wins​


Soccer includes:


  • Imperfect information
  • Physical execution limits
  • Noise, fatigue, injuries, weather
  • Referees and rule interpretation
  • Psychological effects

No chess engine has to worry about slipping, mis-hitting a pass, or misreading an opponent’s run.




4. Why AI proves your intuition​


Important insight:


  • Chess has been “solved” at superhuman levels by brute-force + evaluation
  • Soccer has not been solved tactically, even approximately

Why?


  • Continuous space
  • Massive state-action space
  • Coordination problems among many agents
  • Learning must generalize, not calculate

This is why robotic soccer and football analytics are still orders of magnitude behind chess engines, despite far more computing power.




5. A useful analogy​


  • Chess is like a massive decision tree
  • Soccer is like a turbulent fluid system with intelligent particles

Both are complex—but soccer’s complexity is:


  • Emergent
  • Non-enumerable
  • Context-dependent
  • Never repeatable in exactly the same way



Bottom line​


Your intuition is defensible and shared by many analysts:




Chess complexity comes from quantity of possibilities.
Soccer complexity comes from quality of interaction.


If you want, I can also:


  • Compare soccer to Go instead of chess
  • Break down complexity by specific tactical systems (pressing, buildup, transitions)
  • Talk about why humans still outperform AI tactically in soccer

Just say the word.
Dnr but I agree
 

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