2023.07.28
I spent about an hour recording this video and then just a few seconds into this video, I noticed my camera randomly got blurry and it stayed blurry for the rest of my video (reeee!) I thought I might have to re-record my hour worth of work. However, I thought that maybe it is some weird uploading thing which impacts image quality, so I decided to work on other things (like the thumbnail) and come back in an hour or two and see if the blurriness fixed itself. If not, then I lost nothing more, but if it works, then I'll save myself the effort of re-recording the video. Phew. Luckily for me, it did fix itself, so I didn't have to re-record.
I was planning on some shorter chess videos on beginner-friendly topics, but this week I saw a lot of chess.com forum threads asking about how to cure tilt, or similar posts about controlling emotions during a chess game. I intended to make a video on "how to prevent tilt" but I knew this was a deep topic and would likely take a lot of work and preparation to share in a quality way; I was going to make this video sometime in the future, but no...people need help now.
This video is how to prevent tilt in chess. It is lecture format and probably longer than most would prefer, but this is an important topic which I needed to address with quality insight. I like how it is under an hour; to someone with a tilt problem, this video is an investment as it could literally save people hundreds or thousands of hours of chess struggles. I hope everyone finds this video useful ![]()
I hope to create much shorter chess videos in the near future and ideally with the chess board on my screen like usual.
Here is the newest video regarding tilt. Even if you don't think tilt is a problem for you, I still highly recommend checking out this video; if if just a minute or two and skimming through the video; I share a lot of information which is helpful. ![]()