Abstract
This article explores how chess, as both a game and a metaphorical system, functions as a tool for analyzing political and cultural dynamics. It moves beyond romanticized or simplified analogies, it critically revisits chess metaphors such as gambits, sacrifice, stalemate, and zugzwang through the lens of strategic decision-making under uncertainty. Drawing on Herbert Simon’s theory of bounded rationality, as well as later developments in decision theory by Kahneman, Schelling, and Thaler, the article situates chess at the intersection of rational planning and the limits of information in real-world governance. In parallel, it reevaluates Johan Huizinga’s classical play theory by engaging contemporary scholarship to position chess within broader debates in game and play studies. Through conceptual analysis, the article develops the notion of strategic imagination to assess how chess has shaped and reflected political narratives. The article contributes a theoretical and methodological framework for understanding how abstract game mechanics can illuminate, and sometimes obscure, the complexities of decision-making in political life.