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Updated: July 12, 2025 05:52
World chess champion Magnus Carlsen added yet another feather to his cap—defeating OpenAI's ChatGPT in an internet match without losing a single piece. The Norwegian grandmaster shared screenshots of the game on social media with tongue-in-cheek caption "I sometimes get bored while travelling," followed by a step-by-step breakdown of the AI opponent.
Key aspects of the game:
Carlsen used the Philidor Defense with scalpel precision, forcing ChatGPT to resign on the 53rd move
The AI lost all of its pawns and Carlsen lost none of his pieces, reaching his individual win condition
ChatGPT admitted, calling Carlsen's game "methodical, clean and sharp"
Carlsen complimented the bot on its opening and piece sacrificing but faulted its inability to follow through
AI rating failure:
When asked to estimate Carlsen's strength, ChatGPT placed his classical rating at 1800–2000 FID.
In fact, Carlsen's FIDE rating is 2839, so the AI's prediction is wildly off
The contrast provoked merriment on the web, exposing the limitations of competitive chess analysis with chat AI
Strategic observations:
ChatGPT was impressed by Carlsen's opening expertise, positional restraint, tactical acumen, and endgame mastery
The game showcased the dominance of Carlsen and the difference between master chess computers and AI chatbots
This engaging but enlightening experience reaffirms Carlsen's dominance and provides a reminder: human excellence still rules supreme over the 64 squares, even in the AI era.
Sources: Indian Express, Times of India, DNA India, UNI India, MSN News, BloombergQuint