Chess has enjoyed skyrocketing popularity in recent years, in part due to the hit Netflix series, The Queen’s Gambit. Rob Price says the sport of kings is rife with cheating and sexism. For Business Insider he wanted to find out how and why.
For the first three decades of my life, I’d had fleeting phases of mild interest in chess, playing the occasional game online while procrastinating or over the board with a drink. But the game’s foreboding density and association with supreme intellect dissuaded me from going any deeper. Over the past few years, however, a drumbeat of fanfare and tabloid headlines about the seemingly staid game became inescapable. Like so many other people, I got chess-pilled.
Chess has never been more popular, but its ugly side has also never been more exposed. The same characteristics that have driven its popularity online — an easy-to-understand eight-by-eight grid, a strategy without chance or luck — have also made it a cheater’s paradise. Meanwhile, rampant sexism festers at chess’ heart.
I understand why. I’ve cheated at chess.
Years ago I periodically played online against a college buddy. He beat me, a lot. So in one or two games, purely out of curiosity, I booted up a chess engine, plugged in the moves he made, responded with the computer-determined optimal moves, and won handily. I told him promptly what I’d done. But there was also a prurient little thrill to winning, no matter how undeserved. And I’m hardly the only one who feels this way.
