was it bullet?
Resigning is stupid.



how can one resign just on the basis of assumption that opponent knows how to win the particular position, stupid logic.
How can you be sure you're playing a chess game? You could be a brain in a jar and your entire life is a hallucination. You can't possibly know that anyone exists other than yourself. So how can one make such a topic on the basis of assumption that reality-as-he-knows-it exists? Stupid logic.
I just played a game here, and my opponent resigned when he was subjected to an unstoppable mate in 1, yes it was an obvious mate in 1 and easy one at that, and there was no way my opponent could save the game, so obviously he was gonna lose. But my point is why resign? How can he be so sure that I will actually play the mate in 1, I could hallucinate, I could blunder, there are tonnes of such possibility, how can one resign just on the basis of assumption that opponent knows how to win the particular position, stupid logic.
He is showing u respect by resigning, he is showing that he thinks u are good enough to not miss a mate in 1
I just played a game here, and my opponent resigned when he was subjected to an unstoppable mate in 1, yes it was an obvious mate in 1 and easy one at that, and there was no way my opponent could save the game, so obviously he was gonna lose. But my point is why resign? How can he be so sure that I will actually play the mate in 1, I could hallucinate, I could blunder, there are tonnes of such possibility, how can one resign just on the basis of assumption that opponent knows how to win the particular position, stupid logic.
I think enjoyability (or lack thereof) of the game might have something to do with resignation. If I am down a piece and have nothing for it and have nothing to play for, then, like I said, I have nothing to play for, right? If we're thinking logically... lol
I just played a game here, and my opponent resigned when he was subjected to an unstoppable mate in 1, yes it was an obvious mate in 1 and easy one at that, and there was no way my opponent could save the game, so obviously he was gonna lose. But my point is why resign? How can he be so sure that I will actually play the mate in 1, I could hallucinate, I could blunder, there are tonnes of such possibility, how can one resign just on the basis of assumption that opponent knows how to win the particular position, stupid logic.
Maybe he’s so dissatisfied with his own play that he thinks he shouldn’t be on the board. I do that when I make some stupid unforgivable blunders. If he isn’t being the person he wants to be in the game then he has every right to surrender it.
Everybody has different things they want from it and that they want to be. They are entitled to pursue that.

There are many reasons one might resign. Here is a position from a game I played vs a strong master. I was Black and made a move and the strong master resigned. Can you guess what the move was why he resigned? [game was over 50 years ago and was postal chess.]
2nd question--do you think he was stupid to resign?
3rd question---virtually every strong player will resign some games. Do you think they are "stupid" because they sometimes resign?

Sometimes not resigning works. It has happened a lot of times with me. But if you want to resign, first see how the opponent plays. If they are making blunders and mistake then don't resign. If they are not you can
I always surrender asap -4 P. I am fairly low elo and I do not want to catch behind. I give them the points and start a new one. Simple as that.


There are many reasons one might resign. Here is a position from a game I played vs a strong master. I was Black and made a move and the strong master resigned. Can you guess what the move was why he resigned? [game was over 50 years ago and was postal chess.]
2nd question--do you think he was stupid to resign?
3rd question---virtually every strong player will resign some games. Do you think they are "stupid" because they sometimes resign?
Good ole ponz shoehorning his wins against strong masters, as usual.
I just played a game here, and my opponent resigned when he was subjected to an unstoppable mate in 1, yes it was an obvious mate in 1 and easy one at that, and there was no way my opponent could save the game, so obviously he was gonna lose. But my point is why resign? How can he be so sure that I will actually play the mate in 1, I could hallucinate, I could blunder, there are tonnes of such possibility, how can one resign just on the basis of assumption that opponent knows how to win the particular position, stupid logic.