Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Chess great Carlsen held to draw by 143,000 players

Norwegian grandmaster Magnus Carlsen, pictured during a 2024 match, took on a team of 143,000 opponents
Norwegian grandmaster Magnus Carlsen, pictured during a 2024 match, took on a team of 143,000 opponents - Copyright AFP Marco Antonio Perez
Norwegian grandmaster Magnus Carlsen, pictured during a 2024 match, took on a team of 143,000 opponents - Copyright AFP Marco Antonio Perez

Chess legend Magnus Carlsen, considered one of the best players in history, has been held to a draw by a team of 143,000 opponents in an online match.

Organised by the match site chess.com, the duel — dubbed “Magnus Carlsen vs. The World” — pitted the 34-year-old Norwegian against amateurs from around the planet who decided their moves by popular vote.

The match with Carlsen, who was world champion from 2013 to 2023, opened on April 4, with each side allowed 24 hours to decide its next move.

After more than six weeks, it ended in a draw Monday.

“I felt that I was a little bit better, early in the opening,” Carlsen said in a video.

“Honestly, since then, they haven’t given me a single chance.”

Carlsen is not the first grandmaster to take on a team of thousands.

Russian chess giant Garry Kasparov played more than 50,000 opponents in a 1999 match, while India’s Viswanathan Anand played around 70,000 last year, according to news agency NTB.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

Tech & Science

Take off the blindfolds and look where you’re going.

Entertainment

Veteran electronic musician and British trance star Carl Cox chatted his upcoming show in Brooklyn, New York, and his music and songwriting inspirations.

Tech & Science

Space tech investment is experiencing a boom, with private investment reaching a record $12.4 billion in 2025; yet, Europe lags behind.

Life

Half of Britain is surviving on five hours’ sleep - Sleep Scientist shares four steps to break the cycle.