I love chess, and I also lose to my phone more often than I want to admit. That’s why “Taser Chess” sounds like the kind of unhinged invention that might force better habits—by punishing mistakes with a jolt. A maker who goes by Everything is Hacked built exactly that: a chessboard that delivers an electric shock when you blunder, hesitate, or break basic rules.
The idea came from a simple motivation: stop getting embarrassed by street chess hustlers. The execution, though, turns chess practice into a behavior experiment—where every bad decision gets immediate negative feedback.
How Taser Chess Works: Stockfish + Raspberry Pi + TENS Shocks
The project runs the chess logic on a Raspberry Pi loaded with Stockfish, one of the strongest open-source chess engines. Stockfish evaluates every move and flags errors without mercy. The board then triggers a “punishment” when the system detects a mistake.
For the shock, the creator uses a TENS unit (transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation), a device commonly sold for muscle stimulation and pain relief. Used normally, it’s mild. Cranked up, it becomes… motivational.
The rules are brutally simple:
- Make a bad move → shock
- Touch a piece you can’t move → shock
- Stall too long → shock
- Fail a puzzle → shock
- Hang your queen → definitely shock
Testing It on YouTubers and Hustlers
The creator demoed the board on other YouTubers, including Mehdi “ElectroBOOM” Sadaghdar, who has plenty of experience getting zapped on camera. Reactions ranged from laughing to immediate regret.
Later, the creator took the board back to Union Square to challenge hustlers. They refused to use the device, which is honestly the most reasonable response possible. The creator then played regular chess against them—and still got crushed. The shocks didn’t magically turn into rating points.
Does Pain Actually Improve Chess?
Taser Chess makes one thing very clear: punishment can change behavior, but it doesn’t automatically build skill. Chess improvement still demands pattern recognition, calculation, endgame technique, and practice—none of which arrive just because your hand hurts.
If anything, the device proves a calmer truth: structured learning beats torture. Study tactics, analyze games, and build fundamentals. Leave the electricity to the outlet.
Eco-friendly angle: repairable DIY learning, not disposable gadgets
From a sustainability view, this kind of DIY build can be “greener” than buying disposable training tech—if you reuse parts like a Raspberry Pi, modular wiring, and an existing TENS unit, and you avoid single-purpose plastic junk. Repairable, open-source hardware can extend product life and reduce e-waste—just don’t confuse “eco-friendly” with “safe,” because safety still matters.

