LiAntichess World Cup 2023 – Rules
1. Organization
- The ACWC will be played on Lichess.
- The 2023 Tournament Directors (TDs) are ODMWND, Shiaxou, and TheUnknownGuyReborn.
- In case of disputes between participants, the TDs should be contacted, who will make the final call.
- Failure in complying to the rules can lead to a match forfeit or tournament disqualification, at TDs’ discretion.
2. Player eligibility
- Entry requirements
- Your Lichess account must be created prior to the 1st of January of 2023, 00:00 UTC.
- You must have played at least 1000 rated Antichess games on Lichess prior to March 12, 2023, 00:00 UTC.
- Qualifications will be handled by a Lichess admin, disqualifying elements include:
- You have an account that was marked as an engine user after the 1st of January of 2020.
- You have an account that was marked as a Booster/Sandbagging after the 1st of January of 2022.
- “Cheat detected” games will be grounds for disqualification in the following cases:
- one since the 1st of January of 2022
- two since the 1st of January of 2020
- You already entered the ACWC 2023 with another account. Your already entered account will also be disqualified if you try to join with two accounts.
- BOT accounts cannot play.
3. Format
- All games are rated and have 1+2 as time control.
- The tournament will consist of four stages: Qualification (Swiss), Candidates (Double round-robin), Semifinals (1v1) and the Grand Final and Third Place Playoff (1v1).
- Qualification
- A Swiss tournament will be played between all entrants. Each participant plays a 10-game match per round. A won game gives 1 point, a draw gives 0.5 points, and a lost game gives 0 points. The match ends as soon as one of the players scores more than 5 points, or in the event that, after having played the ten games, the final result is a tie at 5-5.
- The number of rounds will be the base-2 logarithm of the number of participants, rounded down, plus two. So 32-63 players is 7 rounds, 64-127 players is 8 rounds, etc.
- The 12 players that place highest in the Swiss will proceed to the next round.
- Ties will broken (in order) by:
- Cumulative score.
- Tie-break (number of match wins against tied opponents).
- Median-Buchholz.
- Pairings will be taken care of by the TDs and will be posted on Lichess weekly.
- Candidates
- A double round-robin tournament among the candidates will be played, where the “upper” and “lower” pools of 6 players each are determined by placement in the previous rounds.
- The players that go into each Candidate group will be divided as follows: the players in 12th, 9th, 7th, 6th, 4th and 1st place go into the “upper” Candidates pool. The players in 11th, 10th, 8th, 5th, 3rd and 2nd place go into the “lower” Candidates pool.
- Each candidate plays a 10-game match against each other candidate in their pool. A won game gives 1 point, a drawn game gives 0.5 points, a lost game gives 0 points.
- All 10 games must be played, since game scores may be used for tiebreakers.
- The winner of each pool of the Candidates round will play a 10-game Semifinal Match against the second place player in the opposite pool.
- Ties will broken (in order) by:
- Mutual match score.
- Mutual game score.
- Overall game score.
- Result in 2022 ACWC Finals if applicable.
- Result in 2023 ACWC Qualification round.
- Semifinal Matches
- The winners of each Semifinal match will go on to face each other in the Grand Final, and the losers will go on to face each other in the Third Place Playoff.
- If there is no winner after 10 games, then an armageddon game will decide the winner.
- Final Matches
- The winners of each Semifinal match will play a 12-game Grand Final to determine the 2023 Antichess World Champion and Second Place.
- The losers of each Semifinal match will play a 12-game Third Place Playoff to determine Third Place and Fourth Place.
- If there is no winner of the Third Place Playoff, then 2 tiebreaker games will be played.
- If there is no winner of the Grand Final, then 4 tiebreaker games will be played.
- If there is no winner after the tiebreaker games in either final match, then an armageddon game will decide the winner.
- Armageddon Rules
- An armageddon game decides the winner:
- Black gets 3 minutes on the clock and draw odds (i.e. if draw, Black wins).
- Both players make a time offer for White. The lowest offer plays white.
- In case of identical offers, a game of rock-paper-scissors will determine who gets White.
- There is no increment.
- An armageddon game decides the winner:
4. Timeline
- There is one match per week in all rounds.
- There will be a 1-week break between the Qualification and Candidates round, and between the Candidates round and Semifinal Matches.
- The pairings for the first matches will be published on March 19, 2023.
- The pairings for all subsequent matches will be published on subsequent Tuesdays.
- All matches must be completed by the following Monday 23:59 UTC.
5. Match negotiations
- Each player is responsible to offer at least 3 separate times for the match, by Friday 23:59 UTC at the latest, unless an offer has been accepted before that number is reached.
- Players may begin negotiating a playing start time as soon as their next pairing is known. When a time is agreed on, it must be shared in the pairings forum post.
- To prevent (most) time zone confusion, players must communicate their times in UTC.
- The 3 offered times should be no closer than 3 hours to each other and no more than 2 on a single date.
- If 3 offers are not made in time the player at fault must accept a time chosen by the opponent.
- If both players fail to make 3 offers by the deadline then the match will count as a draw and both players will count as having forfeited a game.
- A player should respond to an offer by accepting or making a different offer, preferably within 24 hours.
- If both players make 3 offers but no agreement is made before the weekend then TDs will determine if fault lies with a particular player.
- If a player is at fault then their opponent will decide the match time, if no player is at fault then the match will be ruled as a draw.
- Case-by-case exceptions may be made to the aforementioned rules at the TDs’ discretion.
6. Match rules (applying at all stages)
- Each player has the right to call a break once during the match, between two games. The break lasts at most 10 minutes.
- If no break is called, a rematch must be offered and accepted immediately. Repeated failure in doing so leads to a forfeit.
- If a player is offline at the time of the match, they have a 10 minute grace period to come online and start the game. The appearing player has to message the TDs that their opponent did not show up and again 10 minutes afterwards if the opponent still didn’t show up. The appearing player has the choice to reschedule or claim a win. If the appearing playing does not claim a win and rescheduling fails, the match will be forfeited in favor of the appearing player.
- If a player leaves the match while it’s still ongoing, they get 10 minutes to come back and this counts as their break. If they don’t come back in time, their opponent gets the option to claim a win (similar to rule VI.C).
- If a player gets forfeited in two different matches, they get disqualified from the ACWC.
- After a match, either player must post the results in the Pairings forum post.
7. Reporting cheats
- Accusations of cheating must be made privately to the TDs. Any accusation in public will result in a disqualification of the accuser, regardless of whether the accusation was correct or not.
- If an accused player is found guilty, they will be disqualified from the tournament.
- If a player gets marked as engine/booster on Lichess during the ACWC but for non-ACWC games, they also get disqualified from the ACWC.
8. Disqualification and withdrawals
- Qualifications
- If a player withdraws or gets disqualified from the Qualification, they will not be included in later pairings. If they still have an uncompleted pairing, their opponent wins this game.
- If the disqualification happens on grounds of an engine mark (not booster mark), all of their finished games in the Qualification will be adjudicated in favor of their opponents.
- Candidates: If a player withdraws or gets disqualified from the Candidates, all of their games will be disregarded.
- Semifinal Matches: If a player withdraws or gets disqualified, the other players below them in their Candidate pool move up one position in their placement in the Semifinal Matches.
- Final Matches: If a player withdraws or gets disqualified, the other players below them in the Semifinals and Candidates move up one position in their placement in the Final Matches.