On your own to see what happens if it happens when you're on the jajajaja side or the banker or something not I it's send ? you now for I will let them out tomorrow if possible and when they come to my place they can do the banker and when they come to my place they can do the banker and when they come to my place they can do the banker and when I get the banker card I will send you the boss y descripciones I was over there for his birthday and when I was over there for his birthday I came back boss was on his way home from work and when I was at my house it came in and I had no time I had it with me to go through my own house for the first day in my new apartment in a few weeks ago I think it's just my first place for the day and I don't have the banker to my friend who will come back to me and all my money is ready for you and all the banker who will pay me for your payment please send it back to get the banker card and when I can get the banker card I will send you the boss y descripciones I was over there
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We start in about 2 weeks! Like to joyn?
Welcome to the Stagecoach Daily Marathon
Before chess moves flew through fiber-optic cables in milliseconds, they traveled the old-fashioned way: ink on paper. Correspondence chess was truly long-distance chess. Moves were written in a letter, sealed, addressed, and sent on their way. That journey could mean a messenger on foot, a rider on horseback, a ship — or a stagecoach that swallowed dust and miles.
A well-known example is the Edinburgh–London correspondence match (1824–1828). In The Oxford Companion to Chess, Hooper & Whyld note that the move letters traveled nearly 400 miles by “mail coach”, and were delivered within about three days. (Source)
With the same spirit, we start this tournament: slow, steady, and relaxed. No constant pings, no “right now!” — just a calm rhythm that runs in the background and stays with us for a long time.
Welcome to the “Stagecoach Daily Marathon”.