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Our Links

For a more complete set of general chess links, try Chessopolis or New In Chess which are linked below in the Literature and Miscellaneous section.

Note to webmasters who may consider requesting a link: We only link to sites about chess and board games. Links on this page are reviewed periodically and a link to any site may be removed if the content appears to be out of date or unsuitable for our readers.

Broken links get removed every few weeks so if your site is moving, let us know in good time!

Correspondence Chess Servers

Major CC Organisations

Other email chess clubs

Other CC websites

CL team pages

Player websites

Chess literature

Chess openings

Other Favourites

Irish chess links

Miscellaneous Sites

Chess Newsgroups

The national CC websites, Champions League team links and Irish links are now on separate pages, some linked from the table above.

If you think your site deserves to be linked here, email us with your details. Note that we often do not include site logos (which make the page bigger) and we generally only give links where a site is of high quality or of special interest to correspondence players.

Major Correspondence Chess Organisations

ICCF logo International Correspondence Chess Federation (ICCF)

Recognised by FIDE as the world governing body for correspondence chess: ICCF makes rules, awards titles and runs the most comprehensive and authoritative CC rating list. ICCF was founded in 1951 and the legal successor to previous international bodies ICCA and IFSB (pre-WW2 European body).

The ICCF European zone also has its own good website.

ICCF is a true federation of national organisations with over 50 active members. It has published a book about the first 50 years of its activities, ICCF Gold.

Normally you have to pay entry fees to enter ICCF events. There are two major free email CC organisations.

IECG logo International Email Chess Group (IECG)

IECG began around 1994 and was reconstituted at the end of 1996. It is the larger of the two free organisations and organises a wide range of competitions, including some new ones on the Chessfriend server. However, IECG is rather controversial because it awards titles and runs an event which it calls an email "world championship".

IECC logo International Email Chess Club (IECC)

IECC does not run championships or award bogus titles. It does have a wide range of other events including friendly matches. Its most controversial feature is its attempt to ban the use of computer analysis - so if you like to avoid computer opponents, you have a better chance with IECC. A major article on IECC appeared in Chess Mail 7/2002.

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Correspondence Chess Servers

These are not in any particular order but we have played on the first five.

Chess Mail is a Friend of ICCF siteThe ICCF web server has just been launched!

This is already a fully-featured CC server where serious correspondence chess tournaments can be played. Chess Mail is sponsoring the inaugural event with 91 players in 13 sections. All games can be seen "live" with a 3-move delay so once they are out of the opening this should attract considerable interest. Many other events now started.

A full review of the site was in issue 6 of our magazine.

Chessfriend logoChessfriend.com
Chessfriend is a commercial server that started in January 2003, offering tournaments with substantial cash prizes for players of all classes. There are also other privileges for paying members.
Playchess
Webmaster: Thomas Stahl. Popular German-run CC server (in English) with a wide range of events starting continuously. Good user interface. Choice of computer-assisted or "no-computer" tournaments. Three month free trial and then a small membership fee.
Chessworld
Webmaster: Tryfon Gavriel. This English-run server ourselves was recommended in a reader article published in Chess Mail 6/2002. It has become very popular.
Itsyourturn.com
Popular American-run game server with the widest range of board games including Backgammon, Go, Chinese chess, numerous chess variants and other games. No rating system. Time does not count at weekends. New events start weekly for members, fortnightly for others. Not ideal for chess but excellent if you like its other featured games.
Gameknot
Popular server: good for friendly games but tournaments only start infrequently. Quite a lot of strong players can be encountered on this server.
Red Hot Pawn
Another web-based correspondence chess site that is now well established.
RemoteSchach
A German site where BdF played the Herschel Memorial tournament. A useful feature of this system (described by Dr Baumbach in CM 8/2002) is that you can prepare your moves offline with a client program.
Kingchess
Webmaster: Jens Ramlow. German server which we have not tried.
Stan's NetChess
One of the earliest CC servers, its interface is now very awkward and clunky compared with the slick operation of sites like Chessfriend & Playchess. Seems doomed to disappear soon unless it can upgrade, but has a loyal community of players who like it. A Stansco team is playing in the CL!
Scheming Mind Online Correspondence Chess Club
Another private server! Webmaster: Austin Lockwood
ChessCorner
Another web-based email chess and forum site.
My Chess
A new German server, by Matthias Karkowski.

The above is not a complete list of servers where CC may be played; we may add to it later.

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Other email and postal chess clubs

Apart from the above and the national CC organisations (separate links page), there are a several clubs within the UK and USA that are separately run but affiliated to the national bodies.

In the UK: BCCA BCCS Natcor (NCCC) Social CCA

The British Correspondence Chess Association will be celebrating its centenary next year. It has a new website run by Jonathan Rashleigh; see the link above.

The link we had to BCCS no longer seems to work. Does anybody know a new URL for this club?

In the USA: APCT CCLA USCF

Note that many of Alex Dunne's "Check is in the Mail" columns from Chess Life can be read on the USCF site - a valuable resource! The ASPC site (which used to play a tune when you opened it) seems to have vanished?

There also a number of independent email CC clubs. Here are some:

So far as we can tell, 'For Chess Lovers', SIR and Eclipse no longer exist.

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Various important CC sites

Apart from our own Chess Mail website, where you are now, there is one other very important site to visit regularly: correspondencechess.com, which was established by John Knudsen and is now under the direction of Grayling V. Hill.

The main sections of this site are:

plus the Canadian CCA and APCT sites, Chess Journalists of America site etc. Something new can be found here almost every day.

Note that the ICCF online games archive (curator: Wes Green) is now hosted at the main ICCF website.

 

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Private CC Player Websites

Several individual CC players have their own websites. In alphabetical order, I know about:

Uwe Bekemann (Germany)

Raymond Boger (Norway): see also the CL pages for Randaberg Vikings.

Philippe Chopin (France)

German CC-GM Dr. Stephan Busemann

Dr Michael J. Donnelly (England)

David Flude (Australia) - WRG special!

Viking Chess by Karsten Fyhn: interesting site about Scandinavian chess, written in English by a Dane.

Semyon Goubnitsky (Ukraine) - site partly in English; mostly Russian

Arild Haugen (Norway) is another of the Randaberg Vikings; this is his 'Ramiras' site.

"Herbie" by Christof Herbrechtsmeier (Germany); interesting games (in German).

Keith Hayward (USA)

Jaap van der Kooij (The Netherlands)
(Beware: games he offers for download are in old ChessBase format, often contain duplicates and truncated games, and files usually require a lot of cleaning up.)

Ragnar Wikman (Finland) Not much chess here.

 

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Other Favourites

The principal non-CC links of interest to us are:

The Chess Cafe (home of The Kibitzer). Proprietor: Hanon W. Russell.

Tim Harding's monthly Kibitzer column resides at this very large online magazine website, which is particularly of value to people with an interest in chess history and curiosities, with many columns by other writers. There is also a bulletin board, weekly book reviews of a high standard and an online shop.

The Week In Chess (TWIC) Editor: Mark Crowther; hosted by London Chess Centre.

FIDE (World Chess Federation, governing body for OTB play). Ratings, rules and more.

Ken Whyld Association (The KWA is an international association of people interested in chess literature and chess history. Tim Harding will be giving a talk at its 2005 annual meeting in Amsterdam in September.)

Chess History Editor: Richard Forster. This site now includes Edward Winter's Chess Notes which has moved from The Chess Cafe.

Chess Archaeology Editor: Richard Pope. An older chess history site which doesn't seem to be kept up to date.

The Irish Chess Archive Editor: IM Mark Orr.

ChessLab
A popular high-tech site, featuring a database of two million interactive games you can play through with the Chess Tutor java applet. Find games, download PGN, play through online, analyse online with their engine.

Chessopolis Important site with categorised links and other stuff.

Palamede was an important group of sites but it no longer seems to be functioning except as a loose network of French sites based at a new URL. The name comes from the first French chess magazine published in the 1830s and 1840s.

You can still find the brilliant program Palview4 which is used extensively to present games on our website).

Chess Variants used to be part of Palamede.

GM Alexander Baburin's daily Chess Today and website, GM Square.

Tim Krabbé's Chess Curiosities - a treasure trove of unusual chess facts and strange games.

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Books, magazines and publishers

New In Chess
The world's top chess magazine: eight printed issues per year. Good site for links and now with an online database of 800,000 games.

British Chess Magazine
BCM have the contract to do the Chess Notes site for the OTB British Chess Federation; GM John Emms looks after that.

McFarland Publishing
U.S. publishers of quality chess history books (usually heavy and expensive, however).

Moravian Chess
Dr Vlastimil Fiala's reprint house for chess books and periodicals from the 19th and early 20th century. They also publish (at erratic intervals) the 'Quarterly for Chess History'.

Chess Informator
Yugoslav outfit with the must-have periodicals for the past 30 years but their ideas about how to make an electronic publication are not to everyone's taste.

Kingpin
Scurrilous, funny, sometimes serious, sometimes libellous. Only comes out about 3 times a year when editor Jon Manley is in the mood. A new issue is just out!

Europe Echecs The principal chess magazine in French.

Gambit Publications Books published by company run by GMs John Nunn and Murray Chandler and by FM Graham Burgess.

Pickard & Son Based in Dallas, Texas. Pioneers in chess e-books.

Everyman Chess Prolific British chess book publisher.

Alternative reviews are available at: Randy Bauer's Revealing Reviews.

Looking for rare chess books?

Here are four dealers you can contact:

Raimo Lindroos, T:MI Shakeril, Finland, Email: raimo.lindroos@pp.kolumbus.fi

(Also good for literature on oriental games)

Tony Peterson, England

Manfred Mädler, Dresden, Germany. Email: Schachhaus.Maedler@t-online.de

(A long-established German dealer and CC master)

Schachbücher Urs Frischherz, Switzerland, Email: urs.frischherz@bluewin.ch

(Good site for bibliographical information on chess books)

 

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Commercial, Software & Miscellaneous

Some other sites we consider worth visiting from time to time:

Australian Chess Enterprises (agent for Chess Mail products Down Under)

Wholesale Chess - Buy chess sets, clocks, boards, pieces, books, and other chess equipment.

The Worldwide Web Chess Superstore (Smartchess)

Useful Chess - play or learn

A searchable online chess encyclopaedia: La Mecca.

For game collectors: Britbase is a site we highly recommend for good free downloads of archived British OTB events, plus many links to other sites where more games may be found. This is run by John Saunders who now edits BCM. It links to similar sites in other countries.

If you want to download games by ftp for your database, first get the index from the tremendous University of Pittsburgh pitt.edu site, which has zillions of games and chess software utilities to download in any format you might need. The gamefiles are not really recommended as they include a tremendous amount of incorrect data and garbage,

A particularly good chess coaching page is run by D.R. Regis of Exeter in England:
The Exeter Coaching page.

Excellent beginners' information is also available on the site of former North American CC Champion Jon Edwards who is active as a teacher of chess to children.

A major German-language site: chessplayers.de Webmaster: Mathias Guthmann.

Bruno Berenguer's Chess Problem of the Day has a new URL.

Internet Chess Club (commercial).

Doctor Unclear's Homepage: exposing cheating on chess servers!

World Chess Network. Ambitious online play site. Pay to join for most features.

Microsoft Internet Gaming Zone offers other games besides chess.

Bobby Fischer page by Chuck Ayoub (new URL)

Chess Day Greeting Cards

Software

Dr Robert Pawlak's site for his chess software reviews.

The best program for ICCF email play is probably Ectool by Andres Valverde. Not free, but cheap and it supports both PGN and ICCF message formats.

ChessBase GmbH. The world's biggest chess software company hardly need any introduction, do they?

ChessBase USA US agent for ChessBase.

Chess Assistant Excellent rival Russian program with support in USA and UK.

BOOKUP Corp. (Mike Leahy) American program for learning openings.

For chess fonts, we use the Alpine Electronics series created by the late Steve Smith, the true professional choice for chess publishers but perhaps expensive for others. They are now available again for online purchase.

For advice about diagrams, fonts and chess publishing tips, try the page run by Eric Bentzen for Nørresundby Chess Club's En Passant pages (Denmark). Part of the highly recommended Palamede site (listed under Favourites)

Chess Puzzles: chess tutorial software and training simulators for beginners and tournament chess players.

 

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Sites about Chess Openings

So you want to play some strange openings?

Diemer-Duhm Gambit: Jyrki Heikkinen

The Chess Kamikaze Page wild and woolly openings and gambits

Sokolsky Opening, 1 b4: Marek Trokenheim.

Alternative Orang-Utan opening site (editor Benoit St.-Jean).

Urusov Gambit and related lines (Michael Goeller). MUCH IMPROVED!

Winckelmann-Reimer Gambit site (David Flude).

Nimzowitsch Defence and Clarendon Court Opening (Marek Soszynski, Sutton Coldfield Chess Club site, England)

ChessPublishing.com
If you want to play proper openings and are willing to pay good money... English-run subscription venture, updated monthly and aimed primarily at the keen amateur and improving player. It's a sort of opening theory encyclopaedia/magazine divided into twelve sections edited by different experts (mostly GMs). You can subscribe to just the openings you want, or the lot. Updated monthly with PDF booklets and downloadable games.

 

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The Main Chess Newsgroups

I don't waste time on these any more but if you are a newcomer to the Internet, you may wish to subscribe to at least one of the USENET chess newsgroups, which are subdivided as follows:

rec.games.chess.play-by-email
Correspondence chess news and challenges.
rec.games.chess.computer
Both for programmers and about commercial products; can be technical.
rec.games.chess.politics
Mostly US issues but FIDE shenanigans too.
rec.games.chess.analysis
Specific questions, often about opening or endgame theory, or specific positions.
rec.games.chess.misc
The most important general chess newsgroup.
alt.chess.ics
Mostly for people who play on-line chess by telnet or free servers.
alt.chess.bdg
For addicts of the Blackmar-Diemer Gambit.

Note that it is considered very bad form to post the identical message to more than one of these, thus defeating the whole object of the division that was made in 1995.

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