During a training session at the Ridgedale Library, Wesley So briefly scanned a complex position set up for him on a chessboard.
Then he closed his eyes, bowed his head and pinched the bridge of his nose — a study in concentration.
On the table, the pieces remained frozen in place. In So's head, they were in rapid motion — advancing, retreating, slicing along diagonals, landing wherever his calculations took them.
Seconds later, he looked up, reached for his queen and made his move.
So is a young, fast-rising grandmaster who recently claimed a place among the world's elite players. Ranked No. 8, he's one of two or three young stars being hailed as a possible world champion. Already, he has eclipsed some of the records of chess phenom Bobby Fischer.
A few months ago, the 21-year-old Filipino surprised chess experts by making another move — settling in Minnetonka, far from the world's premier chess centers. He was drawn here by a special bond he developed with a local family, which has taken him in like a son.
So is an intriguing mix of genius and youthful innocence. At the chessboard, he wears a game face worthy of an assassin as he calculates impossibly long streams of potential moves and crushing counterattacks. Away from the board, he's a fun-loving jokester who delights in teasing the members of his newly adopted family.
"He is absolutely remarkable in terms of how modest and down-to-earth and kind he is for someone of his caliber," said Sean Nagle, the reigning Minnesota Chess Champion. "If we were to have one top-10 player settle here, we were lucky to get him."