• Flying Squid
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      1910 months ago

      The Bongcloud Attack (or Bongcloud Opening) is an irregular chess opening that consists of the moves:

      1. e4 e5
      
      1. Ke2?

      It is considered a joke opening and is associated with internet chess humor.

      And I laughed and laughed. Ke2? How delightfully absurd!

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        810 months ago

        Just read this on Wikipedia. It’s great!

        On 15 March 2021, Magnus Carlsen, playing white, led with the Bongcloud in a game against Nakamura at the Magnus Carlsen Invitational. Nakamura mirrored the opening with 2…Ke7, leading to a position nicknamed the Double Bongcloud.[2] The game was intentionally drawn by threefold repetition after the players immediately repeated moves, the particular sequence they used known as the “Hotbox Variation”.

        • Flying Squid
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          110 months ago

          But did the audience erupt in uproarious laughter?

      • Ook the Librarian
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        310 months ago

        And I laughed and laughed. Ke2? How delightfully absurd!

        That’s chess humor for you. In 1975 Martin Gardner published an article (on April 1^st ) claiming that chess had been solved by a supercomputer. Where upon if a human opened e4, the computer would spin its fans for several hours, and then resign.

        It’s a hoot and a half.

      • The Picard Maneuver
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        fedilink
        310 months ago
        1. Ke2 is absurd!

        It would be like if you designed a play in football in which the quarterback is supposed to stand in front of his wide receiver teammates and try to physically hold them back.

        • Flying Squid
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          110 months ago

          Okay, but I wouldn’t call that a joke.

    • @problematicPanther
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      610 months ago

      Bongcloud works because of how stupid it is. Your opponent doesn’t know how to respond.

    • @Donkter
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      510 months ago

      Idk, a lot of pros talk about how boring chess gets at a certain level. Lots of lines are solved so deep that going to tournaments can mean learning who your opponents are, studying as many of the openings that you know they play as deeply as possible and hoping that you guessed the right openings and that they prepared the wrong ones against you.

      Things like the bongcloud work once, when no one at a tournament has seen it before, then it gets solved and playing it is only ever a disadvantage again. It can work in things like rapid chess or whatever when it’s used to throw people off guard.