Chess fans heading to the Speed Chess Championship Finals in London were caught off guard this week after an unusual item appeared on the event’s banned list: How to Win at Chess by YouTube star Levy Rozman, better known as GothamChess.
The finals, scheduled for February 7–8, are set to bring together some of the world’s fastest and sharpest minds over the board. Tickets are already on sale, and excitement is building. But a small detail buried in the event’s FAQ has sparked outsized attention across the chess community.
A Ban That Nobody Saw Coming
In a Google document outlining prohibited items, organizers listed the usual suspects animals, weapons, illegal substances, noisemakers, and laser pointers. Nothing unusual there.
Then came the curveball.
Alongside those items was a specific ban on How to Win at Chess, Rozman’s bestselling beginner-friendly book. Both physical and digital copies are reportedly not allowed inside the venue.
The inclusion immediately raised eyebrows. Chess fans took to Reddit and social media to ask the obvious question: why?
Speculation Takes Over the Chess Community
Theories started flying almost instantly.
Some fans believe it might be a lighthearted inside joke or a tongue-in-cheek rule added for fun. Others suggested it could be an attempt to prevent mass autograph requests if Rozman is attending the event in person.
One Reddit user summed it up neatly: “The only explanation that makes sense is that they don’t want a line of people asking Levy to sign books during matches.”
Another pointed out an odd detail — Rozman’s other book, Chess for Babies, is not banned in any format. That only added to the confusion.
Accidental Marketing or Intentional Move?
The timing of the ban has raised even more eyebrows because Rozman is set to release a sequel, How to Win at Chess: Next Level, later in 2026. Some fans are wondering whether the ban is an accidental publicity boost or a cleverly planted conversation starter.
So far, neither the event organizers nor GothamChess himself have issued an official explanation. That silence has only fueled speculation further.
Why It Matters More Than It Seems
At first glance, this might look like a harmless quirk in event rules. But the reaction highlights just how influential chess content creators have become. GothamChess isn’t just an author or streamer anymore, he’s a central figure in modern chess culture, with over 7 million YouTube subscribers and a massive global fanbase.
The fact that a single book restriction can dominate online discussion shows how blurred the lines are now between professional competition, content creation, and fan engagement.
What Happens Next?
For now, fans attending the Speed Chess Championship Finals will have to leave their copies of How to Win at Chess at home. Whether the ban gets clarified, lifted, or doubled down on remains to be seen.
One thing’s certain: for a game built on quiet concentration, this controversy has made a surprisingly loud move.




