A few days ago I had a ridiculous dream where I was playing against ChatGPT and it randomly gave me two extra rooks, then never cheated again for the rest of the game.
Imagine that. Worstfish needs to up his game.
A few days ago I had a ridiculous dream where I was playing against ChatGPT and it randomly gave me two extra rooks, then never cheated again for the rest of the game.
Imagine that. Worstfish needs to up his game.
So, I climbed up to 759 after much difficulty. Like 10 conversations with ChatGPT, around five forum posts, GothamChess, I mean something worked and I was winning. Then a 12 game losing streak. Sometimes I hang pieces out of nowhere, sometimes I throw away winning positions, and in some cases I have zero idea what's going on. Now I am back to 698 or something. Is it recoverable at all?
So, I climbed up to 759 after much difficulty. Like 10 conversations with ChatGPT, around five forum posts, GothamChess, I mean something worked and I was winning. Then a 12 game losing streak. Sometimes I hang pieces out of nowhere, sometimes I throw away winning positions, and in some cases I have zero idea what's going on. Now I am back to 698 or something. Is it recoverable at all?
Yes? We are all learning a bit at a time, and sometimes you have a bad streak. Sometimes you listen to ChatGPT.
If you are tilting in back-to-back games, a break may be needed to reset. I've had bad streaks where I miss puzzles I shouldn't be missing, and when I see the solution, I know that I know better. Sports psychology may be a better explanation than chess knowledge.
So, I climbed up to 759 after much difficulty. Like 10 conversations with ChatGPT, around five forum posts, GothamChess, I mean something worked and I was winning. Then a 12 game losing streak. Sometimes I hang pieces out of nowhere, sometimes I throw away winning positions, and in some cases I have zero idea what's going on. Now I am back to 698 or something. Is it recoverable at all?
if you've been a rating once, you will be there again, provided that you continue to learn and try to improve.
ChessGoals.com Free Study Plans – Beginner-friendly training routines.