In principle this is ok, but in practice this might lead to some weird dynamics. For example, throughout the game players will be forced to maintain near equality on clock unless they really see an opportunity to find a win by spending more time, but that may be very risky, which will result in boring draws with players trying to win only on time. Or when both players realise that there is no win, the player who is lower on time will try to play fast and recover on clock, which can of course lead to mistakes. Also, especially at high level, White may have better chance of getting a draw while playing marginally faster than black. So overall I think this will not lead to more exciting chess at any level.Juan P. Naar wrote: ↑Sat Jul 26, 2025 7:32 pm Drawless chess doesn't need a new variant, just a new rule: exactly the same as normal chess, but if a game is a draw then the player with most time remaining in the clock gets the win.
I personally see no need to change rules to make individual games decisive, and the variants have no value other than some curiosity. My impression, despite the propaganda, is that classical chess is not broken, and there is still huge interest in classical chess, even at top level, even if some older players are not interested in preparing. I also think that as a spectator there are plenty of exciting games to watch. Today's game between Koneru Humpy and Divya Deshmukh was exciting even though there was likely some preparation behind the pawn sacrifice followed by Ba3. So players who are not afraid of losing are still playing exciting chess. It is Carlsen whose matches with Karjakin and Caruana were boring, because that is when he met his equals, and was afraid of losing. Against Anand and Nepo, he knew that he would win. So it is good that he quit WC chess. Younger players are still going to fight it out without change of rules.