I am a beginner player and although some here express annoyance at those that play to the very end, keep in mind that it is a learning experience. So if someone wallops me early on, I just keep on playing. I'm probably going to lose, but I will learn more by playing against a stronger oponent. If I'm going to lose, my rating is going to go down the same amount but I will learn more.
is it better to lose or resign?
I am a beginner player and although some here express annoyance at those that play to the very end, keep in mind that it is a learning experience. So if someone wallops me early on, I just keep on playing. I'm probably going to lose, but I will learn more by playing against a stronger oponent. If I'm going to lose, my rating is going to go down the same amount but I will learn more.
My suggestion:
Play on until
- You feel certain that your position is completely lost, AND
- You can clearly see how YOU would win the game if the sides were reversed.
In other words, only resign when you feel that there is nothing more that can be learned by continuing.
When you say "time out", I hope you don't mean "just stall until your flag falls".
That is bad sportsmanship and can get you banned, or at least placed in a pool of players where you can only get paired against other bad sports.
Who wants to play a whole series of poor sports, one after the other?
Is that true?? That's AWESOME. I hate it when people do that. I report every one of them for "stalling/quitting games". Never knew if it actually did anything.
When you say "time out", I hope you don't mean "just stall until your flag falls".
That is bad sportsmanship and can get you banned, or at least placed in a pool of players where you can only get paired against other bad sports.
Who wants to play a whole series of poor sports, one after the other?
Is that true?? That's AWESOME. I hate it when people do that. I report every one of them for "stalling/quitting games". Never knew if it actually did anything.
Yes, it's true.
There's a segregated pool for bad sports. They are forced to play each other.
A fate worse than death, I suspect.
Actually chaddumb is right we learn something new from loosing like how we lost it is better to loose
It seems to me the question is better phrased "Is it better to lose by checkmate or to resign?"
Since by resigning, one loses anyway.
And I disagree that one is objectively better than the other. Each person plays chess for his or her own reasons, and as such what is important is whether that person is getting what he or she wants out of the game.
I resigned this game instantly after my last move, realized I was done for before my opponent even reacted:
Because even though I didn't lose by checkmate, I knew the game was an inevitable loss. Some people say play on no matter what, and I get it, and if you want to that's fine. But I make little distinction between playing on in an objectively losing position and hope chess. And I don't want to play hope chess.
I don't always immediately resign after a blunder. But sometimes it is the right thing for me to do given my schedule, frame of mind, look on my cat's face, or direction the wind is blowing. Sometimes post game engine analysis is enough for me to understand how I went wrong without needing to go through the demoralizing process of inevitability.
I would suggest you to keep playing even in a losing position. I once played games where my opponent promoted to 6 queens and stalemated me ![]()
If you also play really fast in the endgame, you might win by timeout
Why resign? Just abandon the game like my last opponent did when faced with losing a rook for a bishop.
Cowardly, childish, unsporting and sadly pretty much the norm online.
Resigning is honourable and honour is something many just ain't got.
Rant over.
Hi,
Just wondering what the difference is to your score if you're check mated or resign first or indeed time out?
Cheers
Trevor
Surprisingly, I have not resigned 'cuz I saw in a video at GothanChess... and guess what? In games I wanted to resign, I stayed calm... then my opponent blundered (not in many games) a win or a draw for me... and they resign *quacks* lol. I got like 40 rating extra and I am still happy
"I am a beginner player and although some here express annoyance at those that play to the very end, keep in mind that it is a learning experience....I'm probably going to lose, but I will learn more by playing against a stronger opponent. "
You'll learn you're best-off resigning.
never resign.
If your goal is to snatch points from other weak players, then of course you should never resign.
But if your goal is to improve your Chess play and become a stronger player, then you should ask yourself which will contribute more toward your growth as a player... playing out a losing game that will teach you next to nothing, in hopes of saving a few rating points, or just resigning your lost game and starting a new one that might actually teach you new skills.
Hi,
I mean to the actuaul number of points you lose...
Exactly the same rating points.
When you say "time out", I hope you don't mean "just stall until your flag falls".
That is bad sportsmanship and can get you banned, or at least placed in a pool of players where you can only get paired against other bad sports.
Who wants to play a whole series of poor sports, one after the other?