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A quiet room. A chessboard. A glass of vodka trembling in a general’s hand. For Stalin, these weren’t games — they were weapons. This gripping, documentary-style story unveils how Joseph Stalin turned leisure into lethal psychology. Every move on the chessboard, every hand of cards, every toast at the Kremlin’s banquet table was a test — not of skill, but of loyalty. Witness how simple games became traps for men who commanded armies, how laughter masked terror, and how hesitation could seal a man’s fate. Under Stalin, even play became politics — and losing wasn’t just losing. It was a death sentence. If you’re fascinated by WWII-era Soviet history, the psychology of dictatorship, and the paranoia that ruled Stalin’s inner circle, this story exposes the terrifying precision of a man who tested loyalty through fear disguised as friendship. Historical Context: Date: 1936–1938 (The Great Purge period) Location: The Kremlin, Moscow, USSR Figures: Joseph Stalin, Major Alexei Smirnov (fictional composite officer), Red Army generals Events: Stalin’s private games and banquets used as psychological loyalty tests during NKVD purges Themes: power, control, paranoia, loyalty under fear, totalitarian psychology, survival Stalin chess, Stalin games, Stalin purges, Stalin loyalty tests, Stalin Kremlin banquets, NKVD purges, Soviet generals, Stalin fear, Joseph Stalin dictatorship, totalitarian regime, Stalin paranoia, Great Purge USSR, Stalin card games, Soviet psychology, Stalin and fear, Stalin control of officers, Kremlin games, Stalin loyalty trials, Stalin history, Stalin’s deadly chess