

Source: This picture was generated with KI from gradually.ai
"
The Queen’s Gambit was fiction — but Judit Polgár’s story was real. At just 17, she faced Garry Kasparov — the world’s No.1 and the most powerful man in chess. What followed would change the game forever. In the 1980s, the idea that a woman could compete with men was laughed at. Fischer said women were “terrible.” Kasparov claimed they were “weaker fighters.” Then came a family from Budapest who decided to prove the world wrong. Their father, László Polgár, believed geniuses are made, not born. So he raised his three daughters — Susan (1969), Sofia (1974), and Judit (1976) — to test that theory. The result?
A revolution. By the time Judit was 15, she had won the Hungarian Championship. By 25, she had beaten every living World Champion — including Kasparov, Anand, and Karpov — and reached World No. 8, the only woman ever to do so.
"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0JGgnLedfRE
László Polgár
(educational scientologist, radical pedagogue):
"Geniuses aren't born, they're built"

- if you want to play a game by yourself:
go to --->>> WORLD CHESS
- if you want to train your chess knowledge or build a chess strength this book is my recommendation for you:
Chess 5334 Problems and Combinations
https://www.amazon.de/Chess-5334-Problems-Combinations-Games
