San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Chess (yes, chess) is now a streaming obsession

- By Kellen Browning Kellen Browning is a New York Times writer.

On a recent afternoon, thousands of noncombata­nts watched from the sidelines as their general ordered his troops across the battlefiel­d and became locked in a fierce duel with the enemy.

At one point, he berated himself for a tactical misstep that could have cost his side the highstakes conflict. Then he smiled and began outmaneuve­ring his foe.

“I can’t lose,” Hikaru Nakamura, 32, said to the exultant onlookers. Victory seemed close as members of the opposing army were vanquished one by one. “I win again — there you go, guys. Wow.” Nakamura gave himself just a moment’s respite, then plunged into another fray. Pawns, knights, bishops and even kings fell before him as the chess grandmaste­r demolished a slate of online challenger­s, all while narrating the tide of the battle to tens of thousands of fans watching him stream live on Twitch, the Amazonowne­d site where people usually broadcast themselves playing video games like “Fortnite” and “Call of Duty.”

The coronaviru­s pandemic and stayathome orders have crowned a host of unlikely winners catering to bored audiences. But watching livestream­s of chess games? Could one of the world’s oldest and most cerebral games really turn into a lively enough pastime to capture the interest of the masses on Twitch?

Turns out, it already has.

Since the pandemic began, viewership of live chess games has soared. From March through August, people watched 41.2 million hours of chess on Twitch, four times as many hours as in the previous six months, according to analytics website SullyGnome. In June, an amateur chess tournament called PogChamps was briefly the topviewed stream on Twitch, with 63,000 people watching at once, SullyGnome said. And popular Twitch gamers like Félix Lengyel (better known to his 3.3 million followers as “xQcOW”) have also recently started streaming chess.

That collision of the chess audience and the general gamer audience has created a “giant chess bonfire,” said Marcus Graham, Twitch’s head of creator developmen­t.

The popularity of online chess has partly been fueled by Nakamura. Last month, one of the world’s top profession­al video game teams, Team SoloMid, beat several esports rivals to sign him to a sixfigure contract so it could pair him with advertiser­s and merchandis­e. Nakamura was one of the first chess players to join an esports team, just a week after a different group signed a Canadian player, Qiyu Zhou. Though Nakamura began streaming chess consistent­ly on his Twitch channel, GMHikaru, in 2018, nearly all of his 528,000 followers have come aboard since the pandemic began. And as his popularity has skyrockete­d, media attention has increased — including a cameo as himself on the television drama “Billions” in May.

“It’s just amazing to see the level of support and the love that I’ve seen from the Twitch community,” Nakamura said. He added that the most appealing part of playing and streaming chess was simply “the fact that I’m so good at it.”

It helps that he has an unimpeacha­ble chess pedigree. In 1998, at age 10, he became the youngest player in the United States to be named a master, a title earned through strong performanc­es. Five years later, he became the youngest U.S. player to graduate to grandmaste­r, the highest title. He has since won five national championsh­ips.

On his Twitch channel, Nakamura, who lives in Los Angeles, rarely stops talking. His stream of commentary and chatter, even as he directs his pieces with the precision of an orchestra conductor, is one of the main reasons fans have flocked to him.

“He draws people because he’s so good, but also, there are other top players on Twitch that are not as engaging as he is, not as funny, not as in tune with the sort of Twitch culture,” said Brandon Benton, 34, a postdoctor­al physics researcher at Cornell University who watches Nakamura stream. He’s a “downtoeart­h memer and jokester.”

If you’re picturing a chess match as a drawnout slog — well, you’re not wrong. A classical game without time limits can last five hours. But many online battles, including nearly all the games that Nakamura streams, are blitz chess. Each player has just a few minutes to complete all of his or her moves, leading to an aggressive, risky style of play that fans say is exhilarati­ng to watch.

A player’s timer stops only when it is the other person’s turn to move a piece, so planning ahead and making quick calls is vital to managing the clock. The climax often comes when mere seconds remain and the combatants exchange a rapid flurry of moves.

In a recent stream, Nakamura had fewer pieces left than his opponent and just 20 seconds remaining. But 41 moves later, he was grinning after pulling off an improbable checkmate that involved charging a pawn across the board and hatching it into a queen. It had taken him just 16 seconds.

“More than anything, it’s the ability to play extremely highlevel chess and win while I seemingly am not focused on the game and talking to my chat,” Nakamura said of his ability to draw a large audience, which he usually retains as he plays 20 or more games in one sitting. “At least at blitz chess, I’m probably the best or secondbest player ever, in the entire history, at least online.”

If Nakamura is as good as he says — and he is, judging from his numerous titles, various internatio­nal awards and 288 victories in 302 streamed matches — then it makes sense that chess fans are tuning in. If Serena Williams and Usain Bolt showed off their unique abilities every day on a livestream, wouldn’t you watch?

Still, chess, to put it kindly, is not quite as visually stimulatin­g as a tennis match or a 100meter dash. So what else is part of the secret?

Many devotees at “Naka’s PogUnivers­ity” — the name of Nakamura’s community on Discord, a voice and text chat applicatio­n — said they had been sucked in after rediscover­ing chess in the past few months while stuck inside. Many had dabbled in the game as children.

Noah Olsen, 24, who lives in Washington, said he enjoyed how interactiv­e Nakamura was with his fans. The grandmaste­r sometimes invites his subscriber­s to play against him on the stream, and he will start with fewer pieces as a handicap or play blindfolde­d.

“It’s definitely a lot of fun to know you’re going up against a chess mind the caliber of Hikaru,” Olsen said. “But the 10,000 people watching while he dismantles you is a little nerveracki­ng.”

In Murcia, Spain, Anthony Nicolaou, 16, recently discovered Nakamura’s channel. That inspired him to rededicate himself to a longtime goal: to beat his father at chess.

“The most important thing I learned from him is that it’s OK to be bad,” he said of watching Nakamura. “I realized you can still learn and improve without feeling like an idiot.”

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