Online chess leader Chess.com is hosting its fifth annual Bullet Chess Championship tournament, and the lineup is pretty wild to look at. World #1 Grandmaster Magnus Carlsen will appear, as will rising Grandmaster and previous tournament winner Alireza Firouzja. Reigning Bullet Chess champion Grandmaster Hiraku Nakamura, well known for streaming on Twitch and YouTube to his 2 million subscribers, will also face off once again with Grandmaster Andrew Tang—who almost stole the title from him last year.
Oh, and there's this other Grandmaster Daniel Naroditsky—he just beat Carlsen and Nakamura in a Bullet competition this past weekend. The total prize pool is some $100,000.
Bullet Chess is the fastest version of what are called rapid chess variants—you might have heard of Blitz chess. This tournament version of Bullet Chess gives players a mere minute on the clock, each, to make their moves. The Chess.com Bullet Championship will take place on July 17 to 21 and promises to be an incredible exercise of sport in the game of kings. Esport, I guess, since they're playing online.
Now that I think about it, do these tournaments make chess the first game to be a transmedia esport—equally physical and digital? Either way you'll be able to watch on chess.com/tv, Twitch, or YouTube with commentary by Chess.com's experts.
If you're just catching on, Chess has had explosive popularity the last few years. Internet chess has truly changed how the sport is played and enjoyed, not to mention ballooned the popularity of speed chess styles that are just as entertaining to watch as play. It's so explosive that Chess.com was hit with a big outage earlier this year. «Honestly, this sucks,» said Chess.com as the proliferation of players and
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