The MSO was the first event of its kind[3] celebrating mental skills and awarding gold, silver and bronze medals for each event[4] and was highly influential on the mind sports movement and competitions that have followed since. The main MSO tournament has been held every year in England.[5][6]
In 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, for the first time, the entire MSO tournament was held online.[7]
The first Mind Sports Olympiad was held in London's Royal Festival Hall in 1997. It brought together an unprecedented number of strategy games and events. William Hartston in The Independent said, "The biggest gamesfest ever to hit these (or perhaps any other) shores".[2]
The inaugural MSO along with a very large number of games, introduced two new events of their own creation the Pentamind and the Decamentathlon. These were two events to parallel the multi-event games in athletics of the modern pentathlon and the decathlon. This was part of the ambition to create an Olympics of the mind.
The Mind Sports Olympiad returned to London with sponsorship in both 1998[8] and 1999.[9] Despite a falling out between the organisers[10] a successful event was held in Alexandra Palace the next year in 2000.[11]
The Mind Sports Olympiad main event continued to happen with smaller sponsorship and the tournaments were held at a number of different universities. The event was still going strong for the years 2001–2006.[18] The main 2004 event featured a separate event for schools, featuring competitions and activities in chess, Go, quizzes and intelligence puzzles. But in 2007 the Mind Sports Olympiad was reduced to a much smaller venue in Potters Bar due to no sponsorship and no advertising.[5] In 2008 the MSO saw a revival, returning to a central London venue, the Royal Horticultural Halls, Westminster and again on 21–31 August 2009[19]
The 2010 event was held at the Soho Theatre in London.[20] In 2011, the Mind Sports Olympiad moved to a bigger venue, the University of London Union.[21] The 16th MSO took place once again at the University of London Union in 18–27 August 2012, and similarly the 17th MSO was also at ULU.[6]
The main MSO event[6] remains truly international,[22] because it is still regarded as the foremost competition for all-rounders especially the "coveted Pentamind World Championship",[6] won in 2010 by Paco Garcia De La Banda from Spain,[23] while the 2011, 2013, 2014 and 2016 Pentamind World Champion Andres Kuusk is from Estonia.[24]
When the MSO was initially formed in 1997, the main organisers included David Levy, Tony Buzan, and Raymond Keene[1] with David Levy being the original founder of the MSO concept.[25]
As of 2012 the board running the MSO along with David Levy[20] are Tony Corfe[26] and Etan Ilfeld[20]
The Olympiad's logo depicted Ajax playing Achilles, used for their medals and awards[27][28]
is based upon the famous depiction found on over 150 items of ancient pottery from around 500 BC
.[29]
Probably based either on an item from The British Museum[30]
or Vatican Museum collections.[31]
Alongside bestowing titles of Olympiad and World Champions, the MSO organisers originally envisaged having their own ratings and ranks system, however, not all of these ideas came to pass.
The MSO continues to give its own ranks of up to International Grandmaster.[28]
The Mind Sports Olympiad main event was at large venues for the first four years before being reduced in size due to funding difficulties.[21] It has been held annually since 1997 at the following locations in England:
The MSO consists mainly of single event competitions most of which are for the nominal title of Olympiad champion, though some trademarked games are authorised by the game designer and publishers as the official world championships. All games, whether an Olympiad or the official World championship, can count towards the Pentamind. Medals, and more recently trophies, are awarded for gold, silver and bronze positions in each competition as well as ranks, with similar awards for the top juniors in each event. In early Olympiads sponsorship allowed for generous financial prizes to go with many of the events. In recent years such prizes have been limited to a small number of events, usually as a result of specific outside sponsorship for that discipline.
This was one of the Mind Sports Olympiad's original events.[4] It was an attempt along with the decamentathlon to produce an event for all-rounders to parallel the Olympic Games with its events the decathlon and pentathlon. Unlike the decamentathlon's fixed format (see separate article) the pentamind has very little fixed format. It disallows using games that are considered too similar and normally requires a long event, but otherwise any five
events from the schedule could be used.
The Pentamind champion is the player with the highest numerical score in "pentamind points" from 5 valid events.
This is calculated using the formula 100 x (n - p) / (n - 1), where n is the number of players and p is the player's position in an event.[18] The position is the position before tie-breaks and any split positions are shared amongst all of the tied players. When there are fewer than 10 players in a tournament, the score is multiplied by a secondary factor [p / (p + 1)].
The World Championship Pentamind event has been won a record six times by Andres Kuusk. [45] surpassing the five times set by Demis Hassabis and the fifth win Ankush Khandelwal.[46]
The Decamentathlon World Championship was originally established as the main event to determine the best all-round games player in the world before being superseded by the Pentamind. The Decamentathlon comprises 10 events scored out of 100, lasting 4 hours largely consisting of examined papers.[1]
The first world amateur poker championships was held in 1998 as part of the second Mind Sports Olympiad.[51] The inaugural event was criticised for the standard of the play[52] and for the events unique feature as only being played for medals and not for money. However, since the poker internet revolution the event continued to flourish with increased numbers.[18] The event also is open to under 18s which the MSO also gives a title since money doesn't change hands[53]
^ abcdMind Sports Olympiad Supplement, The Times, 11 August 1997, online version available from studiogiochi MSO archives [1]Archived 28 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine
^Games: Bridge, The Independent, Alan Hiron, 5 December 1999, [5] Retrieved 2 August 2009
^Britain's Mind Games end in debt and tears, The Independent, Robert Mendick, 13 March 2001, [6]. Retrieved 10. September 2016
^ abFierce rivalry in 'Olympics' for brainboxes, CNN, Paul Sussman, 24 August 2000 "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 28 June 2013. Retrieved 2 August 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) retrieved 16 July 2012
^Uganda: Kampala Wins Gold, AllAfrica.com, Norman Katende, 10 May 2002
[7] retrieved 16 July 2012
^Op-Ed: Mind Sports Olympiad 2011 - with chess diving, Digital Journal, 23 August 2011, Alexander Baron,
http://digitaljournal.com/article/310713. Retrieved 6 September 2011
^Un proyecto de emprendeduría infantil de La Palma recibe respaldo internacional, Que Newspaper, 13 September 2010 [28]Archived 11 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 30 April 2011
^Martyn Minds if he holds onto his crown..., Accrington Observer, Stuart Pike, 20 August 2010, [29]. Retrieved 30 April 2010