Can Experienced Chess Players Always Beat Beginners? Are Hustlers Taking Advantage?

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Jaswitha12

Hey everyone,

I've heard stories about people who are really good at chess using their skills with advanced features to trick newcomers into thinking they're unbeatable. I'm wondering if it's actually possible with this mod version for someone who's played a lot of chess to win every single game against someone who's never played before. Do hustlers often use this Auto-Reply trick to deceive new players? Have you ever seen experienced players consistently win against beginners?

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Thanks a lot,

Jaswitha

KeSetoKaiba

The advantage of hustlers acting less experienced than they are isn't nearly as effective because nowadays, most people probably suspect that if someone is playing chess in the park, they might be better than the average chess player.

The higher rated player is statistically more likely to win, but they are never guaranteed the win. In fact, if you know (or estimate) your rating and your opponent's rating, then you can literally just put those ratings into an online elo calculator and it will give you the mathematical estimate of how likely the game is to be a win, loss, or draw.

The global average rating is roughly 700 rating. Statistically speaking, 1500 rating is something like 90 percentile (top 10% of all chess players), but in certain chess clubs, this might just be an average player. 1800 rating is a really strong club player in most chess clubs. The reason chess hustlers win often is because they practice chess a lot. The average chess hustler rating in Washington Square Park (park in New York famous for its chess hustlers) is 1800 rating and many of them are Master-level (titled players).

As strong as this is though, they are not invincible and occasionally lower rated players do win (as well as higher rated players of course).