Please help me identify a famous game

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parabolalinen

Hi, I read a few chess books years ago, and in one of them a famous match was showcased which I found really impressive. I know this isn't much information to go on, but I was hoping some chess expert would know what one I'm talking about.

I seem to remember it was played between a British or French nobleman (maybe in 18th or 19th century) and his opponent, not in a tournament. It involved (I think) white making a series of risky moves and maybe even a couple of sacrifices to trap his opponent's king in about 8 moves, mainly using both bishops parked in the centre. The opponent kept exploiting what he thought were mistakes and didn't see the danger.

Again, sorry this is not much info, but that's all I have. It was in one of those short chess books for casuals and beginners, a sort of coffee table thing. Cheers.

Fetoxo
Evergeeen game?
parabolalinen

I've watched it back and I think you could possibly be right. Then again, this is far longer than I remembered, which makes me think the game I had in mind didn't use the bishops, it used both knights and in far fewer moves than the Evergreen Game. Thanks, but I'm still not convinced this is the one. Is there a game you know of which famously used both knights from the centre of the board? I'm sure the one I'm looking for had far fewer moves, which was why it was so useful for a small book like that.

parabolalinen

It was with 2 knights, it would have been a smothered mate I think.

blueemu

The most famous chess game EVER was a consultation game between the American chess champion Paul Morphy vs a team made up of Count Isouard and the Duke of Brunswick. Played in the Count's opera box at the Paris Opera during intermission at a performance of "Norma". (Other sources say "The Barber of Seville" but are poorly supported by facts),

Pamvo7
parabolalinen wrote:

...it was played between a British or French nobleman...

One of McDonnell - La Bourdonnais games ?

blueemu
Pamvo7 wrote:
parabolalinen wrote:

...it was played between a British or French nobleman...

One of McDonnell - La Bourdonnais games ?

MaestroDelAjedrez2025

White absolutely can't avoid losing that one

Fr3nchToastCrunch

#7 - This is a bit off topic, but that final position is hilarious IMO.

One enemy pawn that's one square from promoting is already an issue. But three adjacent enemy pawns that are one square away, all while your king is right in the path of those pawns? Yeah, that seems like a good time to quit.