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Invisible Chess's avatar

My other thought on this is ...

I suspect enjoying chess culture and history is probably more important for us average dudes than the elite.

The very top players get rewards from becoming better and better.

For the rest of us - for whom improvement is less likley/takes longer - my guess is finding ways to enjoy the game to keep inspired and motviated to bash our heads against the board year in year out.

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Martin B. Justesen's avatar

I'm not as such in disagreement with Christof. I just think we will lose some human perspective if we choose to forget our heritage only to focus on our contemporary view on chess. But yes, maybe the most effective method

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