The Ruler is Attempting to Have a good sense of security
Online Speed Chess as Self-Alleviating, Tetris, or Cooperative Savage Craftsmanship A chess chart showing four white knights and the white ruler irritating a single dark lord. who's that thumping at my entryway? In the pall of first quarantine, the staple washing, Deborah Birx nights, calm yet for far off alarms, while others in the house went to iPad school or Zoom subcommittees, I played speed chess on the web. Three-minute games, for the most part. At times one-minute games. My adversaries were covered up people, not the machine. Playing not as a part but rather a visitor of the site, the connection point permitted us to collective just in threatening eruptions of hurried pieces. Eventually the administrators added emoticons, so we could ridicule and bother each other, assuming we tracked down spare seconds for the additional snaps. A white banner emoticon, a disapproval emoticon, and a facepalm emoticon three different ways of saying 'you suck' The chess wasn't