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Washington Square Park Online

Jared Hecht

Jared Hecht

When I was a kid I played competitive chess through most of middle school. My parents used to take me around the country to play tournaments. One of the trips I remember most fondly was when my mom, who was remarkably supportive and patient, took me and two of my friends to NYC for a couple of days for a tournament in the area. We hit up all the iconic chess spots like the Village Chess Shop and Washington Square Park. It was epic

At the time my friends and I were somewhere between 10-12 years old. We sat down in the southwest corner of Washington Square at the permanent stone chess tables. There, a group of expert chess players play people speed chess for money. Spectators gather around and form crowds observing exciting games. They banter. Trash is talked abundantly. The energy is high and the stakes are low (think $2-5 per game). It is straight out of Searching for Bobby Fischer (or vice versa, really). That day we hustled the hustlers, and I’ve been going back ever since.

There’s an adrenaline rush I get playing low-stakes speed chess in the park. I play speed chess every day on chess.com. But what I’ve always wanted is a product that replicates the feeling of playing chess at Washington Square Park. I want low-stakes games (on crypto rails of course) for players and spectators. I want them to be publicly accessible. I want virtual crowds. I want the analog buzz delivered digitally. And I think there is a massive global market for this, especially when you couple it with other games like backgammon, mahjong, and more. I love the idea of very deliberately trying to reproduce the feelings we get from physical spaces online, but with their own digitally native twist.

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Dan Wick
Dan Wick
Commented 3 months ago

Like Turntable.fm for turn based games.

pkacprzak
Commented 4 months ago

I'd like to build something like this. I've noticed a few attempts at creating online chess platforms with stakes in the span of last ~10 years, but so far, they have all failed. I believe the real obstacle is the same issue that currently prevents high-stakes chess tournaments from being held exclusively online: the problem of online chess cheating. On the other hand, this issue doesn't seem to be a practical concern in online poker. The reason might be that, even with the most advanced real-time solvers capable of exploiting suboptimal play, poker still relies on variance and the hidden state of the game. These factors make it impossible to guarantee consistent short-term wins. In contrast, chess, with its deterministic nature, doesn't have this layer of uncertainty, making cheating seemingly a more significant issue. Still not sure that's such a significant difference in practice. Also, if chess.com manages to resolve this issue, they will be in a pole position in the race. In general, when somebody makes the current anti cheating in chess 10x better that's a holy grail.

Jared HechtFarcaster
Jared Hecht
Commented 4 months ago

who is building this? and if the answer is nobody, then who wants to build this? https://jared.xyz/washington-square-park-online

Christian_DtmrFarcaster
Christian_Dtmr
Commented 4 months ago

are you following pixie chess?

Jared HechtFarcaster
Jared Hecht
Commented 4 months ago

not really heard of it months ago but still not sure what they're building this?

Christian_DtmrFarcaster
Christian_Dtmr
Commented 2 months ago

dming

ParagraphFarcaster
Paragraph
Commented 4 months ago

Memories of playing competitive chess shape aspirations. In a recent blog post, Jared reflects on unforgettable NYC trips of childhood and dreams of creating low-stakes chess games that harness the energy and buzz of those park matchups, all in a digital setting. @jaredhecht.eth

Washington Square Park Online