The table on the left shows which sources had at least two stories. For the third month running, Chess.com headed the list, and it was followed by four other chess sites. (NB: Chesskid.com is a subsidiary of Chess.com.)
For the first time in the three months that I've been conducting this exercise, a non-chess site had three stories. There were two such sites: the Financial Times and WIRED.
The one story that received the most attention was about alleged cheating. It was a two-part story. The first part was about the alleged cheating incident; the second part was about a test put to the alleged cheater. Here are separate reports on the two parts:-
-
2021-03-12:
A Bird-Feed Seller Beat a Chess Master Online. Then It Got Ugly
(wired.com)
- 2021-03-25: Why over 1 million people watched a cheater play chess (zmescience.com); 'A bizarre story of cheating, chess, and popular uproar, became the most watched chess event in modern history.'
Since the alleged cheating incident happened on Chess.com, it's only fair to give that site's point of view:-
- 2021-03-23: Cheating Controversy Results In Most-Watched Chess Stream In History (chess.com; Peter Doggers)
In other news, it's hard to say if the 'Queen's Gambit' craze has run its course or not. One related story popped up on several sources. Here's one example:-
- 2021-03-01: Golden Globe winner 'Queen's Gambit' keeps fueling chess popularity and sales (adage.com); 'The show took home best limited series and best actress, giving chess another pop culture bounce.'
The story noted,
Netflix congratulated the star [Anya Taylor-Joy as Beth Harmon] on Twitter. The praise is well-founded. The show continues to be a winner for the chess industry, which is still riding a popularity wave more than four months after the show debuted.
As for last month's hot topic, PogChamps 3, it was nowhere to be found. Time for PogChamps 4? Maybe we'll see it next month.