In Praise of Agadmator, the Best Chess Youtuber in the World
“Hello everyone!”
These words, spoken in a bright Croatian accent, herald the start of every video by the YouTube chess guru Agadmator. If you’re one of the world’s hardcore chess neophytes who fell hard in the aftermath of The Queen’s Gambit (looking at myself here), the words are instantly recognizable. For me, today, hearing these words is akin to the mice who heard Pavlov’s bell, except that I know I’m going to get that sweet chess cheese every single time, because the ‘Mator (as I refer to him in my head) always delivers the goods. As a human being, he represents the first time I have been grateful for YouTube’s algorithm, and the chess videos that flood my homepage are a welcome refrain from the “Smirking Fascist OWNS Uppity Woman” genre that is usually so inescapable.
His real name is Antonio Radic, he’s got his own Wikipedia page, and his channel is closing in on a million subscribers and 400 million views. Even before the Queen’s Gambit boom, he was a celebrity in the chess world who was regularly mobbed by his admirers at events, and as the son of a FIDE Master, he’s a strong player in his own right. It’s not his play that distinguishes him, though; it’s the videos. The format is incredibly simple: he reviews one game per video. It can be current or historical, and the brown wood-colored board enjoys pride of place on the screen, with pictures of each player (or of a faceless hooded man, when no pictures are available) denoting the sides. Radic’s box is smaller, and he commentates from his living room, with a brown couch and often his dog in the background. The average video seems to run around 15 minutes, and he’s a marvel at releasing analysis of important games minutes after they conclude.
None of this, of course, quite gets at why he’s so good, and that’s a little harder to explain. There’s a glut of chess analysis on the internet, which is a treasure trove for new zealots like me, but Radic has mastered the art of explaining why each tactic is played, why certain lines weren’t pursued, and how the momentum of a good move can tilt an entire game. When it comes to the play of grandmasters, this is essentially explaining the inexplicable, since their play exists on another plane for beginners like me. Many is the analyst who will say something like, “obviously the pawn capturing the queen here would be a disaster,” when in fact it’s not obvious to many. Radic will spend minutes in a given video tracing hypothetical lines to show exactly why certain maneuvers were avoided. What’s really remarkable is that it all makes sense, and he does it fast. The concept of a 20-minute chess video seems oppressive, but here, there’s never a dull moment. His videos carry you along on a pleasing current, and if you’re not careful it’s easy to sacrifice two hours of your life on his channel. After all, who can resist knowing how Edmund Von Schlachterskeend humiliated Gunt Knurst with the Barrister’s Gambit in 1904? (Those details are made up, I think, but you get the point.)