The Man Who Invented Brilliant Moves

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Published 2024-01-05
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All Comments (21)
  • @paypig919
    you know it's gonna be a banger when Tal is involved
  • @wouter90
    In that same tournament in Barcelona in 1992, Tal's last ever game was a win vs Akopian with white. His final move in that game was Ke1, upon which his opponent (who was getting mated) resigned. After such a momentous career, Tal's final move in a tournament game was the King returning to his home square.
  • @Rozczoch67
    i think many people would appreciate if you continue to make those historical videos, i personally enjoy those
  • From July 1972 to April 1973, Tal played a record 86 consecutive games without a loss, and between October 1973 and October 1974, he played 95 consecutive games without a loss. Absolute Wizard
  • @4RILDIGITAL
    Here's my best combo playing like Tal, sacrifice then resign.
  • Him getting out of his eventual deathbed to beat up the Michael Jordan of chess in basically his prime will always be inspirational to me
  • @kumarnilay2598
    At 15:08 the computer evaluets Be3 as 0.0, but while Levy is explaining that Tal finds moves that the computer needs to reconsider and evaluate. At 15:50 when he comes back to Be3 it is +4.4 for the exact same position. It took Stockfish 42 SECONDS TO EVALUATE THE POSITION CORRECTLY!!! DAMN! Tal was truly a GENIUS!
  • @kennyfa2874
    Tal is the person that inspired me to get into Chess, way back before the chess boom. Whenever I can, I sacrifice like he does. More of this kind of videos please.
  • @pyro2708
    Stockfish is like "I have no fking idea what's going on so I'm just gonna pretend the position is even and hope nobody notices".
  • @mr.nobody2515
    Yes Levy we want more content like this! There is many serious players here who want to review those interesting historic games, like you did before, and honestly Levy, you already made it to the top on YouTube) Now with such popularity, I believe you still gonna get 500k on those vids) Chess is about passion, and you are very passionate on what you do
  • Personally, historical chess is my favourite type of content from this channel, so I'd love to see more of it, even though I understand that it probably wouldn't perform as well as the other videos.
  • @grazzer219
    Its insane that stockfish literally changed its mind after levy went to the variation and played out the defense stockfish thought it had. tal is my favourite player ever
  • @rainakreeger
    As a latvian, I feel very satisfied right now, knowing that Tal is a legend. I had heard his name before, but didn't look into his past too much. This video gave me great insights and someone to look up to now
  • @GandoTheBard
    Morphy and Tal were both spoken of highly by the local masters here in NYC. Many other names like Capablanca and Alekhine came up often and of course everyone loved Nimzowitsch but the heaps of praise were not for Spassky, Karpov, Kasparov, Korchnoi, or Fisher or any of the contemporary giants we saw in the headlines. It was all about Tal. Thanks for giving us some perspective on why this was.
  • @shady980
    All memes aside, this type of chess content is what gets me into playing chess. I remember watching that first video of Magnus speed chess then off to some historical legends with many brilliancies that kick start my love of chess. Thank you for this type of content.
  • @simonepreussner
    Yes more historical games please! I would love if you could maybe, maybe look at Bobby Fisher's win in 21 moves against R. Byrne? It is such an interesting game and I would enjoy watching your take on it.
  • @IDGAG
    I guess Mikhail Tal sacrificed his lifespan to become a chess legend. And that sacrifice is certainly not the correct sacrifice, but a Mikhail Tal's sacrifice
  • @Debb4h
    12:35 "His moves are so god level, stock fish needs time to calculate them" You dont need a second guess who is Levy talking about. Thanks for this mesmerizing video.