Stockfish MOCKS the King's Gambit!

The King's Gambit is a chess opening that begins with the moves: 1. e4 e5 2. f4 White offers a pawn to divert the black e-pawn. If Black accepts the gambit, White has two main plans. The first is to play d4 and Bxf4, regaining the gambit pawn with central domination. The alternative plan is to play Nf3 and Bc4 followed by 0-0, when the semi-open f-file created after a pawn push to g3 allows White to attack the weakest point in Black's position, the pawn on f7. Theory has shown that, in order to maintain the gambit pawn, Black may well be forced to weaken the kingside with moves such as ...g5 or odd piece placement (e.g. ...Nf6–h5). A downside to the King's Gambit is that it weakens White's king's position, exposing it to the latent threat of ...Qh4+ (or ...Be7–h4+). With a black pawn on f4, White cannot usually respond to the check with g3, but if the king is forced to move then it also loses the right to castle. The King's Gambit is one of the oldest documented openings, appearing in one of the earliest chess books, Luis Ramírez de Lucena's Repetición de Amores y Arte de Ajedrez (1497).It was examined by the 17th-century Italian chess player Giulio Cesare Polerio. The King's Gambit was one of the most popular openings until the late 19th century, when improvements in defensive technique led to its decline in popularity. It is infrequently seen at master level today, as Black has several methods to gain equality, but is still popular at amateur level. PGN OF THE GAME: [Event "CCRL 40/15"] [Site "CCRL"] [Date "2018.12.09"] [Round "645.3.81"] [White "Chiron "] [Black "Stockfish "] [Result "0-1"] [WhiteElo "3184"] [BlackElo "3454"] [Variant "Standard"] [TimeControl "-"] [ECO "C34"] [Opening "King's Gambit Accepted: Schallopp Defense"] [Termination "Unknown"] [Annotator "lichess.org"] 1. e4 e5 2. f4?! { (0.12 → -0.65) Inaccuracy. Nf3 was best. } (2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 Nf6 4. O-O Nxe4 5. Re1 Nd6 6. Nxe5 Be7) 2... exf4 3. Nf3 Nf6 { C34 King's Gambit Accepted: Schallopp Defense } 4. e5 Nh5 5. Be2 d6 6. O-O g6 7. d4 Nc6 8. Nc3 Bg7 9. exd6 cxd6 10. d5 Ne5 11. Nd2 O-O 12. a4?! { (-0.45 → -1.37) Inaccuracy. Bxh5 was best. } (12. Bxh5 gxh5) 12... Ng3 13. hxg3 fxg3 14. Rf4 f5 15. a5 b6 16. axb6?? { (-1.19 → -3.88) Blunder. Nf1 was best. } (16. Nf1 g5) 16... Qxb6+ 17. Kh1 g5 18. Na4?! { (-3.33 → -5.16) Inaccuracy. Rfa4 was best. } (18. Rfa4 Rf6) 18... Qd8 19. Rb4 a5 20. Rd4 f4 21. Kg1 g4 22. Ra3 f3 23. gxf3 Qh4 24. Nf1 g2 25. Kxg2 Qh3+ 26. Kf2 gxf3 27. Bxf3 Bg4 28. Rxg4 Nxg4+ 29. Kg1 Be5 30. Qd2 Rxf3 31. Rxf3 Qxf3 32. Qg2 { Black wins. } 0-1 THANKS FOR WATCHING. CHESS IS THE BEST!!!!!!! Support my channel and subscribe. Follow me on:   / jozarov     / jozarov     / jozarov   https://lichess.org/@/jozarov You can support my channel on https://www.paypal.me/jozarov HERE IS THE LINK WHERE YOU CAN DOWNLOAD THE NEW STOCKFISH 15: https://stockfishchess.org DOWNLOAD SOME COOL STOCKFISH 15 GAMES IN PGN FORMAT HERE: http://ccrl.chessdom.com/ccrl/4040/ga... A new major release of Stockfish is now available at https://stockfishchess.org Stockfish 15 continues to push the boundaries of chess, providing unrivalled analysis and playing strength. In our testing, Stockfish 15 is ahead of Stockfish 14 by 36 Elo points and wins nine times more game pairs than it loses. Improvements to the engine have made it possible for Stockfish to end up victorious in tournaments at all sorts of time controls ranging from bullet to classical and even at Fischer random chess. At CCC, Stockfish won all of the latest tournaments: CCC 16 Bullet, Blitz and Rapid, CCC 960 championship, and the CCC 17 Rapid. At TCEC, Stockfish won the Season 21, Cup 9, FRC 4 and in the current Season 22 superfinal, at the time of writing, has won 16 game pairs and not yet lost a single one. This progress is the result of a dedicated team of developers that comes up with new ideas and improvements. For Stockfish 15, we tested nearly 13000 different changes and retained the best 200. These include the fourth generation of our NNUE network architecture, as well as various search improvements. To perform these tests, contributors provide CPU time for testing, and in the last year, they have collectively played roughly a billion chess games. In the last few years, our distributed testing framework, Fishtest, has been operated superbly and has been developed and improved extensively. This work by Pasquale Pigazzini, Tom Vijlbrief, Michel Van den Bergh, and various other developers is an essential part of the success of the Stockfish project. Indeed, the Stockfish project builds on a thriving community of enthusiasts to offer a free and open-source chess engine that is robust, widely available, and very strong. We invite our chess fans to join the Fishtest testing framework and programmers to contribute to the project.