mind game.....

the pictures are all 100% ai created
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Why Higher IQ Players Appear to Start with a Higher Chess Rating
At first glance, it might look like players with a higher IQ start out with a better rating. But that’s not entirely accurate — here’s what’s really going on:
1. Early Games Matter More on Chess Platforms
On most online chess platforms (like Chess.com or Lichess), your first 10–30 games have a huge impact on your rating. The system is still trying to figure out how strong you are, so:
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Winning early games can boost your rating very quickly.
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Losing early games causes your rating to drop sharply.
2. Smarter Players Win More in the Beginning
Players with higher IQs or stronger abstract thinking:
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Pick up chess patterns and rules more quickly.
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Make fewer beginner mistakes (like hanging pieces).
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Tend to beat other beginners more consistently right from the start.
So they don’t technically start with a higher rating — but they climb fast in those first games, which gives the impression of a higher starting point in charts like this one.
3. The “Starting Point” in the Graph
The first point on each curve isn’t the actual rating they began with. It simply reflects where their rating ended up after the initial adjustment phase. It’s more of a “settled rating” once the algorithm has a clearer idea of their level.
Rating Progress with 2000 10 minutes rapid-games played Over Time (excluding the red curve):
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Black Line (130 IQ players):
Shows a steady and consistent climb in rating. These players continue improving at a reliable pace over time and surpass others. -
Yellow Line (110 IQ players):
Also shows progress, though more gradual. They improve over time, but their learning curve is slower than that of the black line group. -
Green Line (95 IQ players):
This group improves the slowest, but still shows gradual rating increases, likely through experience and practice rather than strategic depth.