https://lichess.org/ was invented by one person in France. His name is Thibault. Now there are several people constantly making minor or major improvements. This website will last until the end of time.
Everyone who plays chess and/or watches chess games should use https://lichess.org/ which is totally free, including free computer analysis of your games, and it has zero ads. This is the best chess website in the world. Today I played chess games with somebody in Nigeria and in Brazil. I have played chess games with opponents from at least a hundred different countries including Russia and Iran. No matter what country my opponent lives in, we are all friends because we share a love for chess.
As I write this there are more than 27,000 chess players playing chess at the same time. When their day ends thousands more people will be playing chess here.
It takes only about 1 or 2 minutes to get a free computer analysis of my games which I use to figure out why I lost or why I should have lost. It's like watching a war movie or a knife fight. And my games will stay here until the human race goes extinct. Did I mention everything is free?
It’s been a huge year for Lichess, with a record number of events and a massive increase in users. In fact, there has been so much growth that we finally had to add an extra front-end server to cope! Lichess is not just growing in numbers, though – the hard work of our developers has brought about many new features and technical improvements. We’ve also expanded into new areas, including some forays into journalism and a string of special events. Please join us in celebrating the achievements of the year and looking forward to what the next one will bring!
One billion games
On December 2, the billionth (1,000,000,000th) game was played on Lichess! That’s 10x more games than three years ago.
Some other milestones:
40,332 players connected at once during the World Championship tiebreakers, and regularly over 36,000 since
1,800,000 completed games per day
98,000,000 chess moves played every day
84,000 analyzed games per day (equivalent to 1,400 hours of Stockfish processing)
1,418th most popular website in the world (up from 2,458th at the start of the year!)
Over the course of the year we have been working behind the scenes to make this possible. We upgraded the main server and database servers, implemented more efficient game storage, tweaked kernel parameters and improved websocket handling. We’re now able to simulate realistic load on our test servers, so more performance improvements are to come.
As always, you can view our costs, fully funded by your donations.
New features
If you’ve been paying close attention to announcements throughout the year you’ll already have read about these! In 2018 we added:
the /streamer page and integration, letting you find your favourite chess streamers easily through Lichess, as well as discovering new content (read the blog post here)
improvements to the broadcast feature, which was tested to its limits with the live replay of events throughout the year. These included the World Chess Championship, the 2018 Candidates Tournament, Tata Steel, and many more. It was even used for the St. Louis live coverage of the WCC. Not bad for a feature in beta testing!
integration of bots so you can develop your own engine or just test yourself against the strongest new engines (read the blog post here)
7-piece tablebases to the analysis board for even more in depth endgame analyses (read the blog post here)
Lichess also branched out into some proper journalism with fantastic (even if we say so ourselves) coverage of the biggest chess events of the year:
Candidates by WIM Fiona Steil-Antoni
World Chess Championship by GM Ian Rogers
Special events
We had a great reaction to our call for more events, so in addition to the regularly scheduled programming we hosted a number of special events. We hope you enjoyed them as much as we did, and look forward to more!
Deathmatch: GM Tang vs. FM Rozman
GM Tang vs. Leela Chess Zero
Deathmatch: Penguin vs. Paco
Horde Deathmatch: svenos vs. Stubenfisch
Deathmatch: Leela vs. Stockfish
GM Naroditsky vs. Leela Chess Zero
As well as:
Marathons (over 12200 active participants in the 2018 winter marathon)
Titled Arenas 2 through 9
Shield tournaments
Variant Revolutions
2nd Crazyhouse World Championship
Lichess 45|45 League 3-year anniversary tournament
Meet-ups
It’s not all online, either – Lichess is making an impact in the “real world” too. We had three hugely successful meetups this year and participated in a conference. It was great to meet so many enthusiastic members of the Lichess community!
Oslo
Montréal
London
London Chess Conference - where we gave a small demonstration of Lichess capabilities, specifically for chess in education!
Overall it has been a great year for us. We hope you enjoyed it too and look forward to meeting 2019 together!
Lichess End of Year Update 2018
Dec 31, 2018 Lichess Team Announcements
Onward and upward!
Everyone who plays chess and/or watches chess games should use https://lichess.org/ which is totally free, including free computer analysis of your games, and it has zero ads. This is the best chess website in the world. Today I played chess games with somebody in Nigeria and in Brazil. I have played chess games with opponents from at least a hundred different countries including Russia and Iran. No matter what country my opponent lives in, we are all friends because we share a love for chess.
As I write this there are more than 27,000 chess players playing chess at the same time. When their day ends thousands more people will be playing chess here.
It takes only about 1 or 2 minutes to get a free computer analysis of my games which I use to figure out why I lost or why I should have lost. It's like watching a war movie or a knife fight. And my games will stay here until the human race goes extinct. Did I mention everything is free?
It’s been a huge year for Lichess, with a record number of events and a massive increase in users. In fact, there has been so much growth that we finally had to add an extra front-end server to cope! Lichess is not just growing in numbers, though – the hard work of our developers has brought about many new features and technical improvements. We’ve also expanded into new areas, including some forays into journalism and a string of special events. Please join us in celebrating the achievements of the year and looking forward to what the next one will bring!
One billion games
On December 2, the billionth (1,000,000,000th) game was played on Lichess! That’s 10x more games than three years ago.
Some other milestones:
40,332 players connected at once during the World Championship tiebreakers, and regularly over 36,000 since
1,800,000 completed games per day
98,000,000 chess moves played every day
84,000 analyzed games per day (equivalent to 1,400 hours of Stockfish processing)
1,418th most popular website in the world (up from 2,458th at the start of the year!)
Over the course of the year we have been working behind the scenes to make this possible. We upgraded the main server and database servers, implemented more efficient game storage, tweaked kernel parameters and improved websocket handling. We’re now able to simulate realistic load on our test servers, so more performance improvements are to come.
As always, you can view our costs, fully funded by your donations.
New features
If you’ve been paying close attention to announcements throughout the year you’ll already have read about these! In 2018 we added:
the /streamer page and integration, letting you find your favourite chess streamers easily through Lichess, as well as discovering new content (read the blog post here)
improvements to the broadcast feature, which was tested to its limits with the live replay of events throughout the year. These included the World Chess Championship, the 2018 Candidates Tournament, Tata Steel, and many more. It was even used for the St. Louis live coverage of the WCC. Not bad for a feature in beta testing!
integration of bots so you can develop your own engine or just test yourself against the strongest new engines (read the blog post here)
7-piece tablebases to the analysis board for even more in depth endgame analyses (read the blog post here)
Lichess also branched out into some proper journalism with fantastic (even if we say so ourselves) coverage of the biggest chess events of the year:
Candidates by WIM Fiona Steil-Antoni
World Chess Championship by GM Ian Rogers
Special events
We had a great reaction to our call for more events, so in addition to the regularly scheduled programming we hosted a number of special events. We hope you enjoyed them as much as we did, and look forward to more!
Deathmatch: GM Tang vs. FM Rozman
GM Tang vs. Leela Chess Zero
Deathmatch: Penguin vs. Paco
Horde Deathmatch: svenos vs. Stubenfisch
Deathmatch: Leela vs. Stockfish
GM Naroditsky vs. Leela Chess Zero
As well as:
Marathons (over 12200 active participants in the 2018 winter marathon)
Titled Arenas 2 through 9
Shield tournaments
Variant Revolutions
2nd Crazyhouse World Championship
Lichess 45|45 League 3-year anniversary tournament
Meet-ups
It’s not all online, either – Lichess is making an impact in the “real world” too. We had three hugely successful meetups this year and participated in a conference. It was great to meet so many enthusiastic members of the Lichess community!
Oslo
Montréal
London
London Chess Conference - where we gave a small demonstration of Lichess capabilities, specifically for chess in education!
Overall it has been a great year for us. We hope you enjoyed it too and look forward to meeting 2019 together!
Lichess End of Year Update 2018
Dec 31, 2018 Lichess Team Announcements
Onward and upward!
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.