Then start a match and put board to fullscreen on both windows. Then put those windows side by side so each player can see the board from his perspective. Otherwise, playing on a physical board is perfectly fine. As it was said before me: Open two browser windows (one incognito because otherwise it might override a session and complain). Playing Daily and doing the same is allowed. Playing on a physical board in Live and testing variations on the board, would be considered unfair and cheating. Playing them out on a second board gives you a major advantage as it is easier to see the threats and opportunities if the future board is in front of you. In OTB play you would have to imagine the future moves in your head rather than play them out physically in front of you. Was essentially asking if setting up a second chessboard to play out imagined future scenarios in your rated online game against an opponent is cheating or not. I am just returning to chess after 3 decades so kind of a noob myself. The game board features a grid with numbered squares, and players take. The game is typically played by two or more players, and the goal is to reach the end of the board before the other players. If a player sets up a real board, then maybe that's just his way of training whether that's effective or not, wouldn't it be for himself to judge? So, there's really no reason to really cheat online. Snakes and Ladders is a classic board game that originated in ancient India, and has since become popular around the world. If a player is just duplicating moves from a computer, then he'll likely quit playing soon (and his opponents just played against a computer, no big loss). Perhaps I'm too new to online chess, but I just don't understand all this "cheating" concern.
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