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Kings of the castle: Chess mania sweeps Saudi Arabia

Cafes in Jeddah such as Phases, GoodHood and 1/15 Neighborhood have become popular venues for professional and amateur chess players. (Supplied)
Cafes in Jeddah such as Phases, GoodHood and 1/15 Neighborhood have become popular venues for professional and amateur chess players. (Supplied)
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21 Dec 2021 03:12:26 GMT9
21 Dec 2021 03:12:26 GMT9
  • New passion for game inspired by lockdown boredom and hit Netflix show ‘The Queen’s Gambit’

  • Cafes in Jeddah such as GoodHood and 1/15 Neighborhood have become popular venues for professional and amateur chess players

Ghadi Joudah

JEDDAH: Pandemic lockdown boredom and a hit TV show have sparked a renewed passion in Saudi Arabia for one of the world’s oldest and most popular board games — chess.

No cafe is complete without at least one chess set, and they are becoming popular venues for both amateur and professional players.

The game’s popularity grew amid social restrictions to curb the spread of COVID-19, and received a further boost from the Netflix series “The Queen’s Gambit.”

In the narrow streets of Jeddah’s historic district, elderly men gather around a table playing dominoes with four animated players battling for the win. Nearby, another quiet and calm duo sits on the raised deck chairs, sipping tea and silently fighting to topple the knight’s bishop.

Across town, a married couple sitting in Jeddah’s Nakheel cafe, a cultural institution, whip out their foldable board and pick up from where they last played.

Saudi amateur chess player Emad Suliman, from Jeddah, said: “Chess has been a passion of mine since I was 12 years old. I stopped for a few years but went back to playing when the sport regained its popularity due to the Netflix series.”

Suliman describes it as a huge opportunity in reviving the chess community.

“It’s not a one-move game; you have to strategize your next series of moves and take your opponent’s possible moves into account, too.”

Suliman said that he is excited about chess becoming a popular board game again.

“Chess enhances the memory and therefore promotes better decision-making both during the game and in daily life. It teaches you how to analyze your opponent and what consequences your next move will have,” said Suliman. 

“It teaches us lessons of how to maximize our position in life.”

Cafes in Jeddah such as GoodHood and 1/15 Neighborhood have become popular venues for professional and amateur chess players.

“Reintegrating the game into popular culture is important as it teaches players how to think deeply about the decisions they make, and how those choices might affect them or others,” said Majed AlMarzouki, co-owner of GoodHood cafe.

Fedwa Matlagitow, co-owner of the Jeddah cafe Phases, told Arab News: “Quality time with friends and family strengthens your relationship with them. The social impact of the pandemic, and quarantine in particular, forced us to value the time spent with our loved ones.”

“Board games became more popular during the lockdown, so we took it outside to rejuvenate community engagement.”

The origins of chess can be traced back to a game called chaturanga in sixth-century India.

From the Gupta Empire in India, the coastal Hejaz region, to the bustling narrow alleyways in Cairo, chess transcended empires and centuries as a game of strategy and intellect, a battle of wits and calculated moves.

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