
Levy Rozman
Closer to GM than Most
International Master, bestselling author of How to Win at Chess, and the face of GothamChess — one of the largest chess channels on YouTube. Closer to GM than most. Closer to viral than anyone.

Closer to GM than Most
International Master, bestselling author of How to Win at Chess, and the face of GothamChess — one of the largest chess channels on YouTube. Closer to GM than most. Closer to viral than anyone.
International Master, bestselling author of How to Win at Chess, and the face of GothamChess — one of the largest chess channels on YouTube. Closer to GM than most. Closer to viral than anyone.
Levy Rozman plays the Hard variant — short flashes, decoy swatches, a misleading colour name. A board about not getting tricked suits the International Master who has spent a career teaching people to spot traps on the chessboard. He has prepped the position; the misdirection is the position.
In the Color Memory Game, Levy Rozman plays the Hard variant — three-second flashes with color decoys and a misleading color name. Every one of Levy Rozman’s guesses is generated to land inside their personal accuracy band, so a bad round on their side stays in character and a great round on yours actually wins the match.
75–90% accuracy — small mistakes compound; play tight.
His 82–90% bot is calm and accurate, so the decoy name is your only real edge to neutralize. Treat each round like a chess puzzle: identify the bait (the label), discard it, and commit to the hue you actually saw. Do not blitz — Hard mode gives you three seconds, so use them to verify hue against the decoys before you submit.
Want to face a different bot? See the full challenge roster — fifteen characters across five difficulty tiers, each with their own signature variant. Or play solo Hard to drill the variant on your own first.