"It's a mouse slip," someone whispered. "It's masochistic," another quoted.
In the quiet, wood-paneled halls of the Grandmasters’ Club, tradition was king. Most games began with the steady march of the King’s pawn to or the solid foundation of the Queen’s pawn to d4 . But then there was Arthur, a man who preferred chaos to comfort. "It's a mouse slip," someone whispered
The room went silent. The prodigy blinked. This was the Grob Attack , a move so unconventional that purists often called it a blunder . By moving the g-pawn, Arthur had immediately weakened his own King’s side and ignored the center. "It's a mouse slip