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Netflix’s Queen’s Gambit ignites a chess boom

A drama about a fictional prodigy has newcomers signing up to play online and in real life.

Anya Taylor-Joy as Beth Harmon in The Queen's Gambit.
Anya Taylor-Joy as Beth Harmon in The Queen's Gambit.

The Queen’s Gambit, Netflix’s fictional drama about a female chess prodigy, has pulled off an unlikely gambit of its own: It’s prompted one of the biggest surges in the popularity of chess among enthusiasts since the days of Bobby Fischer’s dominance in the 1970s.

The show has become Netflix’s most widely viewed scripted limited series, with 62 million households tuning in during the first 28 days after its October 23 debut, the streaming company says. (Netflix now counts two minutes of watching as a view.) The impact is clear: Google search queries for chess doubled from October to November. Participation in online chess sites is soaring and it is getting harder to buy some chess sets.

“We’re setting a new record, for most new members in a single day, almost every day of November,” says Rick Barton, director of business development at Chess.com, a site for chess education and online play. That influx of more than 100,000 members daily is mostly beginners, Barton says. The newcomers have been mostly in the 18-to-24 demographic (as high as 60%), and slightly more female than usual, at 25 per cent of new members compared with 22% among the site’s base of 46 million members. Earlier in the year, pandemic lockdowns gave a bump to chess sites, he says. The Queen’s Gambit built on that to create a pop-culture sensation.

Jeff Myers, owner of online retailer thechessstore.com, said his sales this month are triple November’s last year. Demand is running up against a Covid-related supply slowdown, he said, and his inventory is dwindling. “We source our best quality Staunton wood chess pieces from India, and India has really been locked down. They haven’t been able to harvest trees for the sets, and carving factories for the pieces have been closed,” Mr. Myers said. His domestic supply of chess boards also has been disrupted: “The boards I have coming from New York won’t last until Christmas at the rate we are selling.”

Netflix’s seven-episode series is based on a 1983 novel by Walter Tevis. Beth Harmon, played by Anya Taylor-Joy, is a red-headed Kentucky orphan in the 1960s who sees chessboard patterns in her head at age eight. The world opens to Beth as she advances from local curiosity to world champion, all while struggling with substance abuse.

The show feels like a cousin of Amazon’s The Marvelous Mrs Maisel, sharing its swanky mid-century set designs and fashions, international travel and a strong-willed protagonist in a male-dominated field. Its impact, though, has been more like that of Stranger Things, another Netflix series that is credited with spurring a revival of the game Dungeons & Dragons.

What is the secret for injecting chess into the mainstream?

“We had a running joke when we were making it, that we were putting the sexy back in chess,” says Bill Horberg, the executive producer of the series. “We even had T-shirts printed up for the crew that said, ‘Sex, drugs and rook and roll.’ ”

The chess prodigy “is the perfect character for our time,” says Bruce Pandolfini, a chess expert who consulted on the novel and the Netflix series. “Beth is a tremendous survivor.”

Imad Khachan, owner of the Chess Forum in New York City’s Greenwich Village, realised early this month that the show had become a phenomenon.Working in the store after midnight, “I heard the voice of a young woman as she walked by,” Khachan recalled. “She said ‘Queen’s Gambit!’ Usually passers-by just yell ‘Chess!’ Or, if we are open, invariably someone walks in to ask ‘Can I play Bobby Fischer?’ ”

Chess champion Bobby Fischer in London in 1963.
Chess champion Bobby Fischer in London in 1963.

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Getting on the Board

Want to join the chess craze? Here are resources:

Play

Chess.com has created a Beth Harmon chess bot that beginners and experts can play against. Novices can take on Beth at age eight; experts can challenge versions of Beth up to grandmaster level.

Lichess.org, which recently reached 100,000 simultaneous players online, is a free site where one can take on global opponents at the same level of expertise. It offers puzzles for mastering tactics and variants like Antichess and Crazyhouse.

Watch and learn

The chess masters who share expertise on YouTube and Twitch can be entertaining and educational, and they have created a video subgenre analysing matches played in The Queen’s Gambit, which are based on real ones. Antonio Radic, known online as agadmator, attracted 2.2 million views for his analysis of the final episode’s Beth Harmon-Vasily Borgov championship match, based on a 1993 one between Ukrainian Vassily Ivanchuk and American Patrick Wolff. Other video teachers worth checking out include soft-spoken International Master Eric Rosen, the trash-talking grandmasters at Chess Brah, and sisters Alexandra and Andrea Botez, who beat up on the boys as much as Beth Harmon does.

The Wall Street Journal

Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/the-wall-street-journal/great-chess-renaissance-the-queens-gambits-global-influence/news-story/bc2f7b90c4a31a0de18790a0ba164dba