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The context

I am not into chess, but The Queen’s Gambit revealed its interesting world, and something got stuck into my mind.

As shown by this article the movie had to make compromises, especially when depicting the tournaments which have quite strict rules, thus making them very boring for the commercial movie consumers.

The issue

The last match was so long that it required an overnight break. During this break, the players consulted with their teams and the movie suggests that Beth winning was partially influenced by this help. Is this possible in real-life tournaments?

I tried finding an answer, but only got this Quora discussion which suggests that long (overnight) breaks during tournaments are something very rare today.

Rewan Demontay
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Alexei
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    There aren't any breaks during tournament games anymore. Back in the day you could get help from other people (it would have been extremely hard to prevent players from getting it) – David Mar 29 '21 at 13:04
  • The issue is somewhat mitigated by the requirement to specify the next move in a sealed envelope. But of course the analysis of the resulting position and the opponent's likely (sealed or response) move(s) is still an advantage, and in the series it's clear that her opponent (was it the fictional Borgov?) uses it as a timeout when he feels cornered. – Peter - Reinstate Monica Mar 29 '21 at 15:29
  • As an aside, this was also common in Go where games are even longer. A notable occurrence is the "[Game of the Century](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Go_games#The_Game_of_the_Century)", where the prodigy Go Seigen must have felt as if he played against the entire famous Go school his opponent was leading. – Peter - Reinstate Monica Dec 05 '21 at 22:02

1 Answers1

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I haven't seen the series, but this was a quite common practice known as adjournment. It is indeed legal to ask for outside help, in the form of teammates and even computer programs during adjournment. However, they rarely happen anymore:

With the advent of strong chess playing computer programs, which can be used to analyze adjourned positions, most tournaments have abandoned adjourning games in favor of shorter time controls. The first World Chess Championship not to use adjournments was the Classical World Chess Championship 1995, while the last one to use adjournments was the FIDE World Chess Championship 1996.

The Laws of Chess still have guidelines for adjournment, so it's possible to organize a tournament with these breaks, but I can't remember a recent high-level tournament which had them.

Glorfindel
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    Personal comment: I'm old enough to have played tons of adjourned games in my youth, and the unfair unequal footing (strong computers didn't exist at the time, but imagine I'm from the club of SC Hicksville, but my opponent from Biggus Lotsamasterus) surely were the main reason to end the practice. – Hauke Reddmann Mar 28 '21 at 10:42
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    They are rare, but it's a bit strong to say "they don't happen anymore". As recently as 2018 I played a game that *would* have been adjourned had my opponent not resigned when the TD announced the adjournment. – D M Mar 28 '21 at 15:17
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    @HaukeReddmann IIRC, one of Bobby Fisher's complaints was that many of the FIDE's rules from that time (the same time period as the Queen's Gambit, season 1) blatantly favored the Russians, including the adjournment rules, because of how many Russia GMs there were to help each other. if that's true, then the reason that adjournment is disfavored now is probably either that 1) the Russians lost control of the rules and/or, 2) the rise of strong computers meant that adjournment no longer favored those that controlled the rules. – RBarryYoung Mar 28 '21 at 15:38
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    @RBarryYoung Definitely 2). My smartphone can easily beat any Russian GM nowadays. – Annatar Mar 29 '21 at 06:27
  • But by the way, I wouldn't necessarily pin it (only) on the Russians. The FIDE deputy of the local (western) federation was much more likely to come from the prestigious and well-connected Biggus Lotsamasterus than from SC Hicksville, after all. – Annatar Mar 29 '21 at 06:32
  • @Annatar Again, as I recall, (1) happened well before (2), so it really has to do with when the rules changed wrt to those two transformations. – RBarryYoung Mar 29 '21 at 12:59
  • @Annatar Bobby Fisher pinned it on the Soviets, not me. And at the time something like 50% of the FIDEs GMs were Soviet/Russian, so there really was no other comparable Biggus Lotasmasterus. – RBarryYoung Mar 29 '21 at 13:03
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    Referring to this very practice, the 1970s book "Better Chess for Average Players" stated: "It's against the rules, of course, but people still do it." – AJM Mar 29 '21 at 16:56
  • As far as I could see the FIDE laws don't state that you are allowed to use outside help during adjournment - but it doesn't make it illegal either; and practically speaking it would be hard to handle if illegal. – Hans Olsson Mar 29 '21 at 18:00