• @[email protected]
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    8 months ago

    never let the kid win and when they eventually do they will never forget.
    the torch will have been passed.

    • Dharma Curious (he/him)
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      478 months ago

      That was how my mom taught us. I didn’t win a board game, card game, video game, word game, or car game until I damn well earned it. First time I beat her at chess the look of complete shock and bafflement on her face was priceless.

      • @FilthyShrooms
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        228 months ago

        Haha I remember the first time I beat my dad in chess. I think it was mostly luck, since I won in like 3 turns (I later learned it’s called the fools gambit or something). Was very funny, and is still the only time I’ve beat him

        • @xantoxis
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          168 months ago

          At one point my dad taught me chess, and within a few weeks I could beat him because he was never very good.

          Years later, I started playing my stepdad, with an 1800 rating who ran tournaments of blitz chess every day at his workplace. I had learned to play better at my chess club at school, and knew how to play speed chess, and was even beating most of the club at school. But this guy never, ever gave an inch on chess. If you made the exact same mistake twice in two games, you just got punished the exact same way in two consecutive games. He probably would have helped me if I’d asked, but I was too stubborn for that. We bought a chess clock so we could play at home, and played every night. I think we halfway wore out the first chess clock before I ever beat him once. He was momentarily annoyed and then quietly beaming the rest of the night. I was too shocked to say anything except good game.

    • @[email protected]
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      68 months ago

      I will accept I’m old once my niece can beat me in any video game. Until then she gets goomba stomped into the ground.