Danny Rensch, now the Chief Chess Officer at Chess.com, is one of the most influential figures in modern chess. But his path to becoming a global ambassador for the game was anything but ordinary.
In his memoir “Dark Squares: How Chess Saved My Life,” Rensch reveals a turbulent upbringing inside Arizona’s “Church of Immortal Consciousness,” a commune he now describes as a cult. Known as “the Collective,” it preached spiritual hierarchy, communal living, and obedience to its leaders — a world where individuality was often sacrificed in the name of “purpose.”
Rensch’s prodigious chess ability was discovered and exploited by the group’s leader, who presented him as a kind of chosen one destined to elevate their spiritual mission. Separated from his mother and burdened with expectations, Rensch found both escape and imprisonment in chess — the game that brought him acclaim but also deep emotional scars.
As a teen prodigy, he won national titles and became Arizona’s youngest chess master. Yet years of manipulation, pressure, and isolation took their toll. He developed tinnitus, battled addiction, and eventually left the Collective to rebuild his life.
In 2009, Rensch joined the fledgling Chess.com — then a tiny startup competing with the established Internet Chess Club. Guided by a mission to make chess inclusive rather than elitist, he helped transform the platform into a billion-dollar community with over 230 million members.
Today, Rensch calls himself a “shepherd” of chess — humbled by his past, yet driven by a purpose reshaped through pain, resilience, and connection. As he puts it:
“I am not what has happened to me. I am what I’ve chosen to become.”



















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