STOP PLAYING These 4 Chess Openings

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GothamChess

GothamChess

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 2 200
@maximum_75
@maximum_75 2 жыл бұрын
Bong cloud has one variation super easy to learn and surprises the opponent. Has to be the top 3 openings
@egg.007
@egg.007 2 жыл бұрын
*Among us* 😳
@justdidyourmomlol
@justdidyourmomlol 2 жыл бұрын
magnus plays it, so it must be good, right?
@maximum_75
@maximum_75 2 жыл бұрын
@@justdidyourmomlol exactly???
@kiwi-sw9kn
@kiwi-sw9kn 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, in this video
@binodtharu8348
@binodtharu8348 2 жыл бұрын
@@justdidyourmomlol hikaru also
@googleevil9553
@googleevil9553 Жыл бұрын
My favorite opening is when I haven't botched my queen is the first 5 moves. I call it the "Nonblotchqueen" opening.
@dave4lexking
@dave4lexking Жыл бұрын
Also known as Botez gambit declined.
@weirdchamp4601
@weirdchamp4601 Жыл бұрын
@@dave4lexking omfg
@danielrubin353
@danielrubin353 Жыл бұрын
@@dave4lexking well done
@jacobdrollinger4802
@jacobdrollinger4802 Жыл бұрын
This is super easy to play. You leave the queen in its starting position...
@kingrex1931
@kingrex1931 Жыл бұрын
You need to learn the Botez Gambit
@JimmyBoosterCrate
@JimmyBoosterCrate 2 жыл бұрын
1:20 *Ruy Lopez* 7:00 *English* 10:52 *Najdorf* 15:25 *QGA* 19:24 *Grunfeld*
@alexeecs
@alexeecs Жыл бұрын
Thanks! I just wanted to know how it was spelled
@AlexScorpionVn
@AlexScorpionVn Жыл бұрын
Thanks
@ajcon3874
@ajcon3874 Жыл бұрын
I think I’m just gonna play the Vienna.
@giahytran1406
@giahytran1406 Жыл бұрын
I play fianchetto
@ruvik1256
@ruvik1256 Жыл бұрын
I play the farfalle (transl: butterflies). This is where a new piece which looks like a butterfly flies over the king‘s head and shits on him. The king is so pissed of that he kills the queen and himself = I win the game.
@TheSixSides1
@TheSixSides1 Жыл бұрын
1:20 Ruy Lòpez / Spanish Opening 7:00 English Opening 10:52 Najdorf Sicilian Defense 15:25 Queen’s Gambit Accepted 19:24 Grünfield Defense
@ModernDayRenaissanceMan
@ModernDayRenaissanceMan 3 күн бұрын
Wild. I learned the Queen's Gambit accepted and in my second game I got to pull it off perfectly. I play the Ruy Lopez and I do pretty well with it at the 1300 level although I don't understand it's deeper lines very well. I've never played any of the others.
@cosmicvoyager1240
@cosmicvoyager1240 2 жыл бұрын
Accepting the Queen's Gambit still remains to be my most traumatic experience in chess. I remember innocently grabbing that pawn and immediately regretting playing chess.
@smort123
@smort123 2 жыл бұрын
Been there, done that. When you hit 1000 elo and people start playing the Queens Gambit... I was black and thought "What could possibly go wrong" lmao
@dkpandey1996
@dkpandey1996 2 жыл бұрын
Grabbing that pawn is okay, it is hanging on to it that causes the said trauma.
@Terra157
@Terra157 2 жыл бұрын
@@smort123 don't try to protect it, let the opponent capture back
@mario97br
@mario97br 2 жыл бұрын
@@dkpandey1996 Wise
@michaels4255
@michaels4255 2 жыл бұрын
Playing 1d4 and 2c4 against a beginner is just cruel!
@bumblehatches6637
@bumblehatches6637 2 жыл бұрын
Just wanna point out something interesting: 12:28 the Alapin variation of the Sicilian Defence with c3 and d4 is the EXACT reverse of the main line variation of the English Opening with c6-d5. Both of them are bad for the one playing against them. Please, LISTEN to this man and take some of his advice to heart.
@joel9137
@joel9137 2 жыл бұрын
Alapin is hardly scary for black if black knows what they're doing. It's not like you need to know deep theory to play against it anyway, just go d5
@xSpizon_
@xSpizon_ 2 жыл бұрын
if black knows which move to play, alapin is practically useless. Yes you have attacking options, but they can easily defend.
@areebsiddiqui758
@areebsiddiqui758 2 жыл бұрын
I've played the Alapin with white and there really isn't much if black just plays d5. Banking on your opponent to go wrong is not a good long term strategy and won't help you improve.
@konglives4453
@konglives4453 2 жыл бұрын
I ALWAYS listen to Levy and take all of his advice to heart. Who wouldn't ? Levy is a great teacher.
@MatsMatsuo
@MatsMatsuo 2 жыл бұрын
@@joel9137 yeah, i see c3 i play d5 and I enjoy equality :). Honestly as a Sicilian player i have a worse score against the Morra Gambit, even though i Already studied so many times
@MrFlippicat
@MrFlippicat 2 жыл бұрын
As a humble ~800 player, my experience with the Ruy Lopez may be inconsistent on losses and victories but I can say it has been consistent with fun. A tutorial I watched on the matter described it as an opening where tactics and calculation are at the forefront and, possibly it might be placebo, but it definitely feels like playing the Spanish made me aware of applying those skills in my gameplay
@Theodosius_fan
@Theodosius_fan Жыл бұрын
fun? are you a psychopath?
@shoe_gaze
@shoe_gaze Жыл бұрын
where ya at nowadays oliver
@commentator3074
@commentator3074 Жыл бұрын
Im 2200 now, still playing ruy lopez, exept now I play everything but c5(its shit)
@mechantl0up
@mechantl0up Жыл бұрын
For a beginner or sub 1400, all openings are fine, including the Spanish.
@Jee2024IIT
@Jee2024IIT Жыл бұрын
As a 450 elo, Scholar's mate opening is the best 😂
@robinstrength_
@robinstrength_ 2 жыл бұрын
Here I'm gonna share my golden experience. So I studied French, and there's almost 15 systems such as Advance, Winawer, Classical, Open | Closed | Modern Tarrasch, and there's also ton of sidelines such as King's Indian System where white playing d3 instead of d4. Also in Grunfeld which is my favorite against d4, just so insanely complex and there's also more than 10 systems in this opening. I also studied KID, Budapest, Caro Kann, QGD, Slav, Sicilian, and I'm totally agree with Levi that some openings just doesn't belong to amateur play. Budapest, Ponziani, Englund, Scandinavian probably the easiest opening to play than any other else. However we shouldn't memorize chess openings because it isn't effective. I studied tons of openings but I always found my enemies playing weird chess, and shockingly I don't know what to do. Then I realize it is far more effective to study pawn structure such as Caro Formation, Slav, Maroczy, Benoni, Stonewall, etc than study opening. Believe me, opening always share many pattern between each other. You can play KID as white against Caro Kann, French, Sicilian if you know the system with e4, d3, g3-Bg2, Nc3-Ne2, Nf3-Nh4/Ne1 then goes for f4. I think the big idea arises because of the pawn structure. In the Dutch Defense, one of black common maneuver is to play Qe8 then Qg6/Qh5 but that also because of the pawn structure makes it possible. If we play a French and somehow black play f5-e6-d5, we can also do our maneuver in the Dutch with Qe8-Qg6 or we can also do the Budapest rook's maneuver a5-Ra6-Rg6/Rh6 in other opening. So I believe memorizing chess opening isn't important, it's all about the pawn structure and couple of ideas we can absorb in many different openings.
@jackanderson719
@jackanderson719 2 жыл бұрын
I agree. I notice the queens gambit declined and the French are similar.
@wandregisel6385
@wandregisel6385 Жыл бұрын
@@jackanderson719 nah, the French is another animal entirely. It's underratedly very tactical
@jackanderson719
@jackanderson719 Жыл бұрын
@@wandregisel6385 depends on the variation.
@wandregisel6385
@wandregisel6385 Жыл бұрын
@@jackanderson719 perhaps, but I can't think of any. Unless you mean "similar" in that the light-square bishop is locked in. But the ideas are wildly different. The main strategic feature of the French (in its most critical variations) is the central pawn chain, something that pretty much never occurs in the QGD. More similar to the French would be the King's Indian Defense, since both involve pawn chains, but they play very differently
@paultapping9510
@paultapping9510 Жыл бұрын
"we shouldn't memorise openings" Honestly, thank you. I fully agree, but I'm waaaaay too much of a beginner to really feel confident in expressing that opinion, however I totally agree. Rote learning specific moves seems like a really inefficient way to learn, at the beginning.
@treasonouspigeonpeckers957
@treasonouspigeonpeckers957 Жыл бұрын
I like the Semi-Slav but too many people play the Exchange Slav. The solution is to play the Winawer Countergambit and really bring them out of their comfort zone
@Peter-hz3vs
@Peter-hz3vs Жыл бұрын
I just find the slav very restrictive in general. Any recommendation for learning to play it? And is it hard?
@ethansmusic9898
@ethansmusic9898 Жыл бұрын
​@Peter play it like a reversed London. Although be careful about the order of your development. Generally you should do Nf6 before Bf5.
@excitedraichu5891
@excitedraichu5891 2 жыл бұрын
QGA player here. I kept running into literally the exact problems you listed in that section of the video. Recently I tried the Benko Gambit in one game to see how well it would do; had a completely dominant position after like 12 moves. Excellent video as always. Keep it up!
@pietersteegmans5155
@pietersteegmans5155 2 жыл бұрын
I play the QGA with a lot of succes. There are 2 positions I get 95% of the time: After white goes 3.Nf3 of 3.e3, I play Nf6 and most of the times, I transpose into the main line, where white goes Nf3, e3 Bc4, and 0-0 and I play e6, c5 and a6. Plans are not easy, but this works. If white goes 3.e4 or 3.Nc3, I play 3...e5 and after 4.d5 Nf6, white plays either Nc3 or e4 (the one they didn't play on move 3. Black has there a strong move 5...b5 after which I win more or less 70% of my games. I'm not saying you have to play this, but if you want to investigate it again, this is what I would recommend (I'm rated 1800, right on the line between intermediate and advanced.
@aluminiumknight4038
@aluminiumknight4038 2 жыл бұрын
I like to play e5 and b4+
@andrewschultz6608
@andrewschultz6608 2 жыл бұрын
I switched from the QGA to the Benko too. One of the nice things was, I might have been lost in some positions, but I was able to fight a lot more than in the QGA, and that was important to me. It also made me less scared to sac pawns for activity in general, too!
@zanti4132
@zanti4132 2 жыл бұрын
Throughout this video Levi is saying to avoid openings that are complex and difficult to learn. Given that, you'd think he'd be an advocate of the QGA, which is not a difficult opening at all. Just realize that as a general rule it's a bad idea to try hanging onto the pawn. A typical move order to start the game is 1. d4 d5 2. c4 dxc4 3. e3 (if 3. e4 then 3...e5 or 3...Nf6, as suggested in the video, are easy to play and perfectly okay) e6 4. Bxc4 Nf6 5. Nf3 c5 (using the c-pawn to challenge the center is an important point to equalizing quickly) 6. O-O a6, reaching what can be considered the starting position of the QGA. What's nice about this position is the light-squared bishop has the a8-h1 to play on, instead of getting stuck behind pawns as in the QGD. From here, just get your pieces out to good squares, and with reasonable play you'll be surprised how often you attain the advantage around moves 15 to 20.
@jackanderson719
@jackanderson719 2 жыл бұрын
Benko Gambit is a solid opening. If you get to an endgame it's always better for black.
@nashwinder
@nashwinder 2 жыл бұрын
you should make a series of this, for different rating tiers
@glajolambokla
@glajolambokla 2 жыл бұрын
given Gotham doesn't do much editing etc. I don't see why he doesn't occasionally make 2-4 hour videos where he just talks about openings and chess philosophy etc. Especially since he's kind of plateaued at blitz and there's no point in him playing anymore unless he takes 6 months off for hardcore classical study
@A8r9t
@A8r9t 2 жыл бұрын
We need this
@waltlock8805
@waltlock8805 2 жыл бұрын
He did a tier list of openings with Hikaru for three levels: grandmaster, intermediate, and beginner. If you're looking for ideas for openings, they're great vids to check out.
@glajolambokla
@glajolambokla 2 жыл бұрын
@@waltlock8805 he should do full strategic overviews of these openings and play some games, also should go more in depth into middle game structures and all the weird little non intuitive things masters are aware of, it's frustrating because I feel I am way more talented at chess than Gotham he just knows more stuff I don't have the time to learn through trial and error
@EnigmaChess
@EnigmaChess 2 жыл бұрын
fr, the ruy Lopez is really good above 1500
@ekamsingh1640
@ekamsingh1640 2 жыл бұрын
I have been playing the Grünfeld for sometime now and honestly, against 1300 lower its not that bad if you do a little study. Won very good games with c5.
@rickrolled3666
@rickrolled3666 2 жыл бұрын
Yo 🔥kzbin.info/www/bejne/qJWtapWpg5x9d9k
@naonerfemoasol.9336
@naonerfemoasol.9336 2 жыл бұрын
Same, under 1500 everyone will just go for Exchange
@nikmrn
@nikmrn 2 жыл бұрын
Grünfeld* lol
@ekamsingh1640
@ekamsingh1640 2 жыл бұрын
@@nikmrn Sorry I am a little stupid sometimes.
@chesspotato
@chesspotato 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah grunfeld is a decent opening , I enjoy playing with it and against it ( mainly against it tho)
@johnny2003
@johnny2003 Жыл бұрын
It’s bold of you to assume I knew I was playing these openings.
@pratikdas5027
@pratikdas5027 6 ай бұрын
My man
@PAPPADASH
@PAPPADASH 5 ай бұрын
Highly under rated comment
@patrickfitzgerald6601
@patrickfitzgerald6601 4 ай бұрын
I laughed for 3 seconds. Thank you sir.
@drakesavory2019
@drakesavory2019 Жыл бұрын
I started chess playing the Ruy Lopez and after the invariable Morphy Defense my bishop always ended up on the same diagonal as the Vienna Game - so I said screw it and started learning the Vienna and never play the RL anymore.
@princeantisocial
@princeantisocial Жыл бұрын
Same when I started learning opening some blog on Google suggest the ruy lopez I was just 200-300 elo after learning ruy lopez I lost to some fishing pole trap etc and I switched to the Vienna gambit
@szaboadam7161
@szaboadam7161 2 жыл бұрын
Hey Levy! Loving these videos! I have an idea. Most of us have difficulty punishing "bad" moves when it comes to the opening. Can you perhaps make a video about explaining certain principles on how to spot these miss-steps? :)
@markrichardson2512
@markrichardson2512 2 жыл бұрын
This, my God this. As a beginner nearing 1000 elo, this is still the hardest part of the game. Opponent will play something stupid, say jumping the knight into the position on move 3 or something. I'll try kicking the knight out, make an inaccuracy or something, and now the opening is in unfamiliar territory, and well... It's time to wing it and play some chess
@timothymantor7332
@timothymantor7332 Жыл бұрын
@@markrichardson2512 I'm only a 500 but this drives me nuts. It's hard enough trying to start out and learning an opening only for my opponent to make some wild move 10 seconds into the game and I'm freaking out wondering if it's a legit move only to learn that it really wasn't and I'm just bad lol.
@Mr72LOST
@Mr72LOST Жыл бұрын
@@timothymantor7332 You learn an opening not by memorizing moves but by knowing which principles you have to follow and what this opening is about. Too many players just memorize moves and play bad moves after their last book move. Levy´s video is very important here.
@naxyan1193
@naxyan1193 Жыл бұрын
@@markrichardson2512 whenever your learning theory there is a reason why would your opponent play a spesific move, if they don't it must be a mistake.
@markrichardson2512
@markrichardson2512 Жыл бұрын
@@naxyan1193 that's not how theory works
@fartbucket3524
@fartbucket3524 Жыл бұрын
I've always felt bad for thinking learning the ruy lopez would be a waste of time so this video made me feel good
@wildorca4500
@wildorca4500 Жыл бұрын
​​​@@jamiewalkerdine3705This is not really relevant as there are a lot of traps in any opening. For example, there are loads of ways of crushing novice caro-kann players because they don't know their stuff. A lot of players still fall for 1. e4 c6 2. Nc3 d5 3. Nf3 dxe4 4. Nxe4 Nf6 5. Qe2 Nbd7 6. Nd6# lol. Even knowing that, there are loads of ideas about sacrifices on e6 that even some high level caro players are unaware of. I also play the panov attack because loads of noob caro players don't learn the theory and get crushed instantly. Very dangerous for black. A lot of novice and even some higher level french players still walk straight into a greek gift.
@zkat_masquerave
@zkat_masquerave Жыл бұрын
Same, I always felt it seemed needlessly reckless compared to Bc4
@wildorca4500
@wildorca4500 Жыл бұрын
@@jamiewalkerdine3705 If you check the lichess database a lot of people are still falling for common caro-kann traps. A lot of the time the move that falls into the trap is the 2nd or 3rd most popular move. Also panov attack is very popular. A lot of low level caro-kann players will immediately play dxc4 which is of course a positional mistake. White is winning the vast majority of games from this position.
@wildorca4500
@wildorca4500 Жыл бұрын
@@jamiewalkerdine3705 That is true. This applies the same to traps in other openings like the Ruy Lopez though.
@timesmy668
@timesmy668 Жыл бұрын
Traps in spanish is easy to figure out once you think and dont play mindlessly ffs. Theres no bishop traps, no space disadvantage, no nothing. You can play ruy without theory (thats what i do) because no lunatic studies ruy theory until like 2000. Also its the best opening to improve your middle gane planning because the ideas are fairly simple in ruy.
@nitorishogiplayer3465
@nitorishogiplayer3465 Жыл бұрын
I remember reading a beginner's chess book and the first opening it introduced was the Ruy Lopez and I never understood why the bishop had to attack the knight only to backtrack after the pawns kick it away again so I'm surprised this is the first opening I shouldn't learn
@blueflavoredlemon2683
@blueflavoredlemon2683 Жыл бұрын
Got the same book. It says it’s not best for beginners but it’s still good to learn
@tellahsage6477
@tellahsage6477 7 ай бұрын
If Black kicks the bishop back straight away then you're just in a better version of the italian game where you have a bishop pointed at f7 that can't be hit with tempo by a d5 push. And in all of the positions before the bishop is kicked, Black is under constant pressure due to the tension on the knight that's defending the center, so White can use this to influence the position slightly in his favor. I'm not a titled player but that's basically it.
@Anonymous-8080
@Anonymous-8080 6 ай бұрын
Same
@michaellisinski2822
@michaellisinski2822 2 жыл бұрын
One of the best parts of the Kan is that a lot of people try to play the "English Attack" against it with 6.Be3 just like in the Najdorf. The problem is that after b4 and then pinning white's knight to the king, the attack is not nearly as effective against the Kan as it is against the Najdorf. It's not completely losing, but it's just a little bit too slow to be scary, and if white stubbornly moves the Queen into the bishop's path with Qd2 in an effort to long castle black is already better. I've had this happen more than once. A good opening against players who play routine moves without actually considering the position.
@verbfrombonsai8852
@verbfrombonsai8852 2 жыл бұрын
I learned so much more about opening theory by playing simple openings than studying the complex super GM meta openings. If anything, simple openings taught me some of the stuff you need to be aware of as a prerequisite for the complex ones. For example, the french taught me about the importance of pawn breaks controlling the center which helped me navigate the closed positions of the italian and spanish openings. The London helped me learn purposeful maneuvers to attack which is really valuable for me learning how to properly counter attack out of the more positional Sicilian positions. Now I am revisiting those openings with my new understanding to finally break past 1600
@Lime130
@Lime130 11 ай бұрын
what do you mean the dragon sicilian is simple? you can mess up 15000 different ways with black if you dont know what you are doing
@ReiAyasuka
@ReiAyasuka 9 ай бұрын
Some Giri guy made a course on how to really ask some questions in the Dragon. Since I studied the Dragon for White, I score pretty well. Admittedly, I always f it up before that. Wouldn't want to play such an opening with Black though.
@codeovercode167
@codeovercode167 2 жыл бұрын
5 seconds in and I already know the sicilian is gonna be one of them.
@manabuhorikita969
@manabuhorikita969 2 жыл бұрын
I'm 1800 in rapid and I started to play the sicilian (najdorf) when I was at 900 elo I want to say, you'll learn the side lines and how to punish them way before having your first open sicilian. people just know 2 moves of theory and just let you do your things and then get crushed. the only real problem you'll have I believe is that most of the side lines are more oriented towards positional chess instead of attacking chess. But I've come to really like the expansions on the queen side when facing the grand prix and especially the fake one (with f4 on move 2). also people seems to prefer the delayed alapin (to the alapin) which is just not good of an opening. and for the najdorf yes it's really hard but you should manage if you learn to know when to castle and when not to... but around 1500 people seems to like putting a knight on d5 really early in the game which is really bad as it releases the pressure instantly and you just end up in a better position if you just take it (in the early part of the game the d5 square isn't attacked enough in most lines and a white pawn arrive on that square)
@andreitiberiovicgazdovici
@andreitiberiovicgazdovici 2 жыл бұрын
The Ruy Lopez is the first opening my dad taught me,and i play it all my life. It's really hard to know it well, but i've beaten 2200 with it as a 1650.
@rickrolled3666
@rickrolled3666 2 жыл бұрын
Yo 🔥kzbin.info/www/bejne/qJWtapWpg5x9d9k
@chesspotato
@chesspotato 2 жыл бұрын
???
@webbowser8834
@webbowser8834 2 жыл бұрын
Hey man, if you know an opening and have practiced it, by all means use it. This video isn't for folks who already know the Ruy Lopez or QGA or whatever, this video is for folks who don't know their openings yet and are looking for openings to learn.
@chesspotato
@chesspotato 2 жыл бұрын
@@webbowser8834 true
@ekamsingh1640
@ekamsingh1640 2 жыл бұрын
@@webbowser8834 Exactly, I have learned the Grunfeld the most out of any opening and I crush people easily with it as I am 1200. You can play any opening(low level) as long as you learn to refute the stupid variations which you know the opponent will play. You rarely get the main line in lower levels.
@PandaGMD
@PandaGMD Жыл бұрын
I’m not an IM, BUT, in my experience, the Grünfeld is very playable as long as you book about 12 moves for Exchange, Stockholm, and Three Knights’ Variation. I’d also look into the Accelerated Russian Variation and Brinckmann Attack as well.
@TechTeardownYT
@TechTeardownYT Жыл бұрын
I'm brand new just breaching the 300 mark. I picked the London randomly. I don't fully understand it. I don't remember the text book middle games and sacrifices that make the London strong. But the position has made my middle game stronger. And made my games longer. When I play high level players they don't destroy me early with it. And when I play people my level they get confused on how to break through my lines.
@patrickmorales8749
@patrickmorales8749 2 жыл бұрын
As a novice it feels that the advantage of attempting the Lopez is that you get to practice dynamic games rather than rehearsing an open. It feels like something to throw in from time to time just to make sure you’re thinking and not performing an opening which I tend to do when I get too ‘deep’ in an opening
@michaelmcgee335
@michaelmcgee335 Жыл бұрын
Play whatever you like sure you’ll lose some game but it’s about having fun. I’m 1900 + rated.
@edcraddock9868
@edcraddock9868 2 жыл бұрын
I agree that the Sicilian can be tricky to grasp and a lot of time to undertake but I also thinks it’s given me super interesting and dynamic positions, and as long as you are comfortable working through different positions that come up, like the alapin or 2.Nc3 or the rossolimo then I think it’s a really good choice. I play the accelerated dragon and you can crush people very quickly with it.
@alessandrocioeta3058
@alessandrocioeta3058 2 жыл бұрын
I don’t know why but when i was starting chess i immediately learned the spanish and kept studying it without understanding how difficult it was, so i went up the rating ladders just playing it and the result is that i love the spanish
@Jonjooooo
@Jonjooooo Жыл бұрын
Welp, there's all my favourite openings.
@timothymantor7332
@timothymantor7332 Жыл бұрын
Seriously appreciate this video as a beginner. I was wondering how to start studying chess openings, because I do like chess alot but I also find it hard to sit down and study anything. It's definitely an optimisation problem for me and I was struggling with it for awhile, wondering where should I even start and it was very helpful to get some advice on which openings are even worth the hassle. Also I have to say the grunfield looks really cool. Thanks Levi.
@Mac_n_CheeseSauce
@Mac_n_CheeseSauce 2 жыл бұрын
I’m glad you changed your mind about the Grunfeld. I’m not high rated but I’ve had a lot of success and fun playing it. I’ve found the games to be tactical and sharp.
@grim-reaper-2168
@grim-reaper-2168 2 жыл бұрын
I remember when I first started I played the “Kadas opening”, I knew it was bad but I tried to make it work. Eventually gave up and just went for the stonewall
@rickrolled3666
@rickrolled3666 2 жыл бұрын
Yo 🔥kzbin.info/www/bejne/qJWtapWpg5x9d9k
@tdeleven
@tdeleven 2 жыл бұрын
is kadas 1.h4?
@hams4962
@hams4962 2 жыл бұрын
@@tdeleven yes, usually followed by d5 then Rh3
@nikolasdaniel8755
@nikolasdaniel8755 2 жыл бұрын
I like playing the Sicilian because my opponents have no idea what to do against it. I have a 70% win rate in the Sicilian even though I am butchering it objectively.
@zoetje9817
@zoetje9817 2 жыл бұрын
Lmao. Meanwhile I don’t know any opening, other than “e4; confusing variation”
@hector9586
@hector9586 2 жыл бұрын
then you will reach 1500 and will face every single anti sicilian in history.
@Mathijs_A
@Mathijs_A 2 жыл бұрын
​@@hector9586 1500s don't properly know anti sicilians either
@nikolasdaniel8755
@nikolasdaniel8755 2 жыл бұрын
I don't play Sicilian against higher rated opponents. Played it once against a 1400. I was better in the opening but he stomped me with a kingside attack.
@hector9586
@hector9586 2 жыл бұрын
@@Mathijs_A I mean, Alapin is not hard to play the most weird looking moves is Na3 in some variations.
@PanasheWayne
@PanasheWayne 3 ай бұрын
Thank you very much . I didnt know such openings are complicated to understand
@xhuggels
@xhuggels Жыл бұрын
I’m not a good player as I simply don’t put in the time. I have found that with the scotch game I can get myself into better positions more often because there’s not much the opponent can do to avoid the game I’ve played hundreds of times. Glad you suggested it for a similar reason as I play it. That is also why I play kings Indian defense vs d4. I don’t have the time to learn anything else. Against e4 I play the French defense, with which I’ve spent time remembering the lines enough to where the first 8-10 moves is well prepared. Is the French defense a good go to or should I be looking at something else?
@umangsheel7819
@umangsheel7819 Жыл бұрын
it does have a decent number of variations, coming from a guy who plays the French, but it's rather simple. At my level too, only 2 variations pop up usually, Advanced, Exchange. Rarely the Two Knights or the 3.Nc3 lines, and I've yet to see a Tarrasch
@asherblake1
@asherblake1 Жыл бұрын
dude you have just described my entire repertoire but replace the scotch with the first 3 chapters of Gotham's e4 course
@wildorca4500
@wildorca4500 Жыл бұрын
As you've said that you play KID and Scotch you would probably enjoy Sicilian/Open Sicilian. It's often said that the Sicilian and the KID have the same spirit, They are both aggressive openings where black is taking a risk to play for the win. However, Sicilian often results in more open positions like the Scotch. Open Sicilian is basically playing the Scotch against the Sicilian except it's even better in this case.
@wildorca4500
@wildorca4500 Жыл бұрын
French is decent but you have to work around a tight, closed position with a bad light square bishop. In this sense, it's like the KID, except in the KID the light square bishop is the good bishop and the dark square bishop is the bad bishop (unless the board opens up). Caro-Kann is very solid. It aims to strike in the centre with d5, like the French, without blocking in the light square bishop. The disadvantage is that you have to spend an extra tempo on playing c6-c5 instead of playing it in 1 move like in the French or Sicilian. For this reason, the Caro-Kann has a reputation as a more slow, passive opening.
@xhuggels
@xhuggels Жыл бұрын
@@wildorca4500 personally I enjoy direct moves that focus on tactical play. When playing the scotch, the opponent really has to play my game for a time. There are barely any viable options to deviate from it. This is the reason I enjoy the French defense too. I play kings Indian defense because I have no interest in playing into a queens gambit. It is a fairly safe opening, with not much room for the opponent to catch me off guard early.
@Erichteia
@Erichteia 2 жыл бұрын
Small hint for anyone around my rating (1400-1500 Lichess): I've almost never had a opponent that knew what to do after the Albin countergambit as response to the queens gambit. I've never been allowed to play the trap, but generally do get a very good position after a few moves. (which I then screw up the way a 1400 Lichess player occasionally does :p )
@echelon1014
@echelon1014 2 жыл бұрын
I actually got someone to fall for it all the way through on lichess lmfao (he resigned after i took his queen)
@Erichteia
@Erichteia 2 жыл бұрын
@@echelon1014 lucky you 😊
@wandregisel6385
@wandregisel6385 Жыл бұрын
I know exactly which trap you're talking about. Since I'm quite aware of it, I don't fall for it, but I also don't get much against the Albin. I mostly play the English these days
@popebender1351
@popebender1351 2 жыл бұрын
Against the Alapin, I recommend playing d5. You’ll have to take back with the queen if they take the pawn but there aren’t immediate threats on the queen which is nice so you can develop your pieces. I’ve seen top level games where black gets a comfortable position, including a monster game from Nepo. I suggest looking into some games.
@scoutbane1651
@scoutbane1651 2 жыл бұрын
I don't like the scandi so I play blackmar-diemer against it, but the knight kicking away the queen motif is still glued into my head. So when I see someone block that C3 early, instant D5 from me. You took away that knight's main development square and I'm sure as hell going to take advantage of it. That being said I don't like playing the sicillian either as either side lol.
@jamesparkinson6237
@jamesparkinson6237 2 жыл бұрын
I’m studying the English atm (specifically the Botvinnik variation by Simon Williams) and this variation really does present consistent results and the best thing about the opening is the ideas are easy to understand and you can get the same set up for most of blacks responses, of course there are specifics you need to keep in mind but it’s very good because if you can spot and figure out blocks plan and actively stop it, it pretty much plays itself :D that’s my opinion on the matter 😂
@marcofrey2903
@marcofrey2903 2 жыл бұрын
What's your ELO? I'm looking to grind against the English because I'm still so unfamiliar with it. Not too common and I don't have practice in facing it. I'm around 1400 rapid.
@dviesel2604
@dviesel2604 4 ай бұрын
I started using the Ruy López as a 700 and now Im 1000 in less than a week. Dont think its a difficult oppening to learn
@Jack-Lack
@Jack-Lack Жыл бұрын
IMO: London for white. Nearly the same moves every game. Pirc Defense for black against e4, King's Indian Defense against d4. They basically play the same moves in a slightly different order, and you can pretty much play the same moves every game.
@nickoslekkas3336
@nickoslekkas3336 2 жыл бұрын
I think ruy is pretty good for intermediate players, i have been playing it on and off for 10 years and sure you need to have a weapon for berlin and other weird variations but it will greatly expand your chess knowledge, feel and intuition as well as your calculating skills. I main Kann for 2 years now and i love it greatly recommended for anyone who likes the Sicilian, also check the early b5 kann which is a great surprise weapon. Against queen's gambit i greatly suggest the nimzo indian, such an easy opening to understand and also leads to very interesting fun games.
@rayqu85
@rayqu85 Жыл бұрын
Love the Nimzo Indian as well, always fun games
@XVRMEDIA
@XVRMEDIA 2 жыл бұрын
Both Ruy Lopez and English are amazing for positional players that are not afraid of cramped positions. Knowing the ~ 20 moves plans in Ruy Lopez will win you lots of blitz games on time. In these openings you have to understand how to use a knight. Beginners usually discard knights and consider them inferior to bishops. That’s not the case with Ruy Lopez and English, where knights are the only pieces that can facilitate breakouts. Bishops become active much later in the game. The Najdorf Sicillian is for the mental asylum. More often than not white will attempt to crush you on the kings side and your counterplay is mostly on the queens side, hoping to drive away some minor pieces and push d5 while white goes g4-g5-h4 on your king. It’s like having two dudes with baseball bats attempting to hit each other in the head. Each move has to be active. Waste a tempo and you’re gone.
@marcofrey2903
@marcofrey2903 2 жыл бұрын
As someone who thrives on action--open or semi-open centers and activity--I struggle against such openings as the English.
@notyourdad
@notyourdad 2 жыл бұрын
I recently put together a comprehensive Gambits Repertoire for myself and have been having a lot of fun and a good amount of success with it, partially exactly because I have a response ready to most openings that forces my opponent to play into my opening, not the other way around - so in around 90% of my games I get to play the way I want.
@koekskesdoos
@koekskesdoos Жыл бұрын
Most instructional chess video I saw in years. So many lines touched upon. I certainly agree with the ruy Lopez, I suggest adding the scotch gambit as a variation of the scotch game to the repertoire.
@kryptexgamer7542
@kryptexgamer7542 Жыл бұрын
I have actually played the first one without knowing about it👍😂
@alexandrecachon1370
@alexandrecachon1370 2 жыл бұрын
As an intermediate player, I actually really like the ruy. I feel like there are not plans, like in a lot of openings, but there's like a lot of moves that white wants to play eventually, and it never feels like there's enough time to play them all if black is combative enough, so you have to pick and choose. Through experience at my level (1600ish on lichess) I kind of feel like there are certain plans for black that are more or less effective, and a list of moves that I want to do over time. I feel like I develop chess thinking by figuring out which of the laundry list of moves are appropriate for the position. So for example, I know that in ruy positions I want to castle, break in the center at some point, (d4 +c3) and push c3 to retreat my LSB and allow it to defend the e4 pawn. (So I want to play bishop c2 at some point after bishop a5) I hope that my opponent extends the kingside to push the bishop back, and that I have pushed c3 before that, so I can retreat my bishop in a single tempo. I also potentially want to play re1, but that might weaken f2, so h3 might be useful to prevent knights or bishops dropping in. Basically, I feel like after move 4ish, I can play basically any of these moves plus a few other plans (a4? queenside knight to f1?) and end up kind of okay as long as I'm thinking about what makes sense. I also like that the ruy forces me to think only about one main pawn break in the centre, (in most games, it's certainly more complicated in practice) so I can focus on how the d4 push affects any bishops in the position. And I also like how it lets me play on all sides of the board and experiment with a- and b- pawn pushes. Then, if the queenside opens up, I can learn how to contest open files. And if I have c1/c2 bishops then a kingside attack looms. Basically, I think the overall rhythm of a ruy game is really conducive to my learning. I feel like I think about the moves instead of theory I've memorized. And some predictable plans by black (a7, b6) occur in many games and have fairly straightforward responses. Just wanted to add my two cents - there are certainly good reasons to recommend against the ruy for most levels, but I've found it really fun and fairly intuitive, actually.
@tameshrew469
@tameshrew469 2 жыл бұрын
I agree I don't think you need to learn that much in the mainlines. It's all quite logical. There are plans later in the game though, usually once the pawn structure changes. If it closes white often goes for a kingside attack where they try and get a knight sac on f5 for example. Or sometimes playing a5 and doubling rooks on the a file. Or just restricting blacks plans. Don't forget as well that YOU can pick sidelines that force black into positions they won't know and you will still probably have a slight edge because ruy Lopez is so strong objectively. Against the chigorin I like the d5 variation which is objectively fairly equal but you play g4 and move your queen and knights to the kingside and go for mate.
@throwaway2430
@throwaway2430 2 жыл бұрын
I think it really depends on what your goals are. Why would someone who actually has the time to memorize want to play a weaker opening just because he can get away with that against lower ELO players? That's how I've always felt ever since I was 800 rated.
@morgancolin-mourre4760
@morgancolin-mourre4760 2 жыл бұрын
I remember when I started chess again around a year ago, I started to study the Ruy Lopez, and then saw a video of Gotham where he said almost exactly what he’s saying here… I stopped playing the Ruy Lopez immediately and started studying some other stuff, and looking back at it a year later and 400 points higher, it was the best decision I ever made (chess-related)
@r.m2192
@r.m2192 2 жыл бұрын
Idk man I’m 600 points higher than a year ago and it’s by far my favourite opening and I now know enough of all the variations to destroy everyone else because they are completely incompetent in the ruy lopez
@EMFObserver
@EMFObserver 2 жыл бұрын
@@r.m2192 I’m 500 points higher than a year ago and playing the ruy gives me good success. I’m still under 1400 so people don’t know variations at all yet but I feel comfortable with it
@agnesmasih8277
@agnesmasih8277 2 жыл бұрын
@@EMFObserver wait till you reach 1400😈
@agnesmasih8277
@agnesmasih8277 2 жыл бұрын
@@r.m2192 ruy lopez is ez to beat
@iainmcclure416
@iainmcclure416 2 жыл бұрын
Life is too short for the Ruy Lopez.
@asansfakeaccound5466
@asansfakeaccound5466 2 жыл бұрын
Man, the rui lopez is my second favourite opening for white after queens gambit/catalan if declined exactly because there are so many variations and shitty responses that i always have fun figuring out how to play against to sadistically restrict my opponent to zero and kill all his fun from the game, because he didn't prepare for literally even one lane that he could pick of all and that fact just annoys me. I guess it just fits my character. I love studying openings and always when i invent something new for me with engines, fire out 15 moves of prep for any oppenent's response with alphazerolike sacrifices against chesscom normies or my dad when i practise. And like exactly as gotham said. I love having no controll over opponents setup, because i love the strategic battle of setups. This is why i love chess. "Practicality" to be honest depends on the time that we spend. If you want to learn the game, choose opening that you can't afford to fully understand in like month period, so it improves all your knowledge as you learn it, different transformations of positions, middlegames, attacking, controlling strategical points. Gotham's content is very casual friendly as it should be for wide public and i wrote all of that just to say that i agree with him. That crap is impractical unless you are some tryhard like me and i felt like i had to change narration for second part of comment, because this is most entertaining chess channel, i liked the video. If someone had nerves to read it all, have a wonderful day.
@grimmister
@grimmister 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks, you have a great one as well! :)
@c-w-h
@c-w-h Жыл бұрын
Yep, I always challenge myself against incompetent chess players. I am not afraid to lose. Its more fun as a challenge. Repetitive game play is boring.
@aidenbagshaw5573
@aidenbagshaw5573 2 жыл бұрын
My dad exclusively plays Ruy Lopez, Sicilian, and Queen’s gambit accepted.
@josepharmstrong6429
@josepharmstrong6429 9 ай бұрын
If anything, this made me want to learn the Ruy Lopez opening.
@nbassasin8092
@nbassasin8092 8 ай бұрын
good luk learning one of the 5 most complicated openings in the game people want to fly before they can even crawl, cute
@josepharmstrong6429
@josepharmstrong6429 8 ай бұрын
@@nbassasin8092 In a game you actually can if you really study it. This is exactly as Levi said, it’s complicated and needs a lot of studying. You’re thinking of the game wrong, it’s a bad idea to put your ego on something you don’t really understand
@CaioXpsycholisergycs
@CaioXpsycholisergycs 2 жыл бұрын
Yo Levy, could you make a video talking about how to study chess? I love this game and find it really satisfying to beat someone by punishing a mistake I've already seen. Still, I've tried to read books on openings, some 1.d4 stuff, some book on the French Defense and I think the usual "memorize the moves" approach to be somewhat dull and dry. Would be great if you, as a teacher could point us to some other learning method for the amateur player, I've always thought about some kind of concept based learning, like study about pawn breaks, in general, then apply it to some opening you already been playing for awhile, or something along these lines. Love your content!
@mikecollins4740
@mikecollins4740 2 жыл бұрын
Levy has a beginner course that covers that. Buy it.
@hector9586
@hector9586 2 жыл бұрын
first lesson as a amateur players about "studying", do not learn much opening theory, do tactics,middlegames and endgames, learn chess fundamentals like it's a bible, around 1500, start having a simple repertoire with white and black against most popular responses, after a while learning to calculate is important.
@ottovabonjo9605
@ottovabonjo9605 2 жыл бұрын
The best way to play is to not play at all. :)
@survivorsa5923
@survivorsa5923 2 жыл бұрын
Agreed
@xanon64
@xanon64 2 жыл бұрын
😂🤣
@alekitik1016
@alekitik1016 2 жыл бұрын
I never lost against Magnus Carlsen.
@fritzlange7934
@fritzlange7934 2 жыл бұрын
Best advice a chess player can receive.
@madmalkav6540
@madmalkav6540 2 жыл бұрын
Is this a reference to "Wargames"?
@bentonlife
@bentonlife 2 жыл бұрын
You did it again Levi! just what I need to hear in my struggle to learn the game. Focus on small success! keeps me challenged and not frustrated. Thanks for taking the time to make content at all levels.
@draheim90
@draheim90 2 жыл бұрын
As a 1400 rapid player who almost exclusively only plays the Ruy as white when it’s an option, I feel attacked.
@thedirtbag7
@thedirtbag7 Жыл бұрын
Interesting. I am one of those annoying ppl who does very little study and plays about 1400-1600 most of the time. Some of my best and worst games are apparently the ruy Lopez. As white I usually make it all the way to pawn h3 (just thinking of how to restrict blacks knights). This explains so much!
@umangsheel7819
@umangsheel7819 Жыл бұрын
FIDE 1400-1600?
@seasick9916
@seasick9916 Жыл бұрын
The Ruy Lopez was my common go to as well and I consistently crushed....problem is that I didn't have access to a single chessbook, teacher or video. I had time to evolve it over 6 years of playing. Now a days though if I tried that same process of learning I would get crushed by people studying the foils to it. Just like video states it is too complex. Intermediate players should keep it simple.
@Euruzilys
@Euruzilys 2 жыл бұрын
“Can’t event cook simple dish, but wanna do complicated dish” (paraphrased) I feel personally attacked. I like to try complicated dishes for fun and it hurts me at the end :(
@lidds__
@lidds__ Жыл бұрын
"Shut up, you're going to blow the kitchen up!" I love this stuff x
@aluminiumknight4038
@aluminiumknight4038 2 жыл бұрын
All of that applies to the Vienna or the London. People play random moves starting from move 3. I believe that strategic patterns and plans are a million times more important than the opening, as well as knowing the concepts of compensation, bad piece, activity and initiative my level (1500). If the material is equal a +2 evaluation does not really mean anything. Even losing a piece in the opening is not a guaranteed lose, it's like 60% loss.. So I don't even need to learn that much theory unless I want to improve my rating a lot..
@Kevinpbryant69999
@Kevinpbryant69999 Жыл бұрын
I play the London and Vienna and absolutely no one knows the lines for them and im just winning immediately
@wildorca4500
@wildorca4500 Жыл бұрын
This is wrong for several reasons: 1. If you tell a Sicilian player to play the Caro-Kann then they are just going to waste time learning Caro-Kann theory and have to start from square one when they play the Sicilian. Even if it's the Najdorf, it's better to start playing it early on to become familiar with it rather than give yourself more work by learning another opening. 2. It isn't so important to learn deep Sicilian theory at lower levels as no-one is so booked up on it so it's just a game of chess. Pointing out beginner mistakes in the Sicilian is disingenuous as beginners can also go wrong in the Caro-Kann or French and get mated in the opening if they don't know what they're doing. 3. Sicilian Najdorf has different variations to know but so do the Caro-Kann and King's Indian Defence. They're no different from the Najdorf in that sense. 4. Based on a person's playing style they will find different openings more or less difficult. Some players find Sicilian difficult as it's very sharp and tactical. Other players find that play in the Sicilian flows much easier as it's very open and dynamic. Caro-Kann is more solid and positional so it can be safer but doesn't offer the same type of double-edged, dynamic play. 5. This is biased as Levy does not play the Najdorf or Ruy Lopez. So you are telling others not to play an opening which you don't play yourself when it's probably because it doesn't fit your personal style.
@mypony891
@mypony891 2 жыл бұрын
Hey, thanks Levy. I was actually trying to figure out what to play with black against d4. Also, you really helped me out with the Vienna gambit. I don't always get the position but it's a huge amount of fun when I do and it's easy to learn. Thank you.
@joshualandry3160
@joshualandry3160 2 жыл бұрын
So, yes I play the Ruy Lopez and after a fair bit of study it does wipe the opponent off the board most of the time. It is defiantly not a casual opening. It was part of an openings course that I've spent literal days studying. About 5 months in and I haven't started the Sicilian or the Nimzo-Indian, so I agree. Not casual openings but very effective.
@iainmcclure416
@iainmcclure416 2 жыл бұрын
1. ... d5. And then all your hard prep is wasted.
@joshualandry3160
@joshualandry3160 2 жыл бұрын
@@iainmcclure416 actually, smile in amusement since that refutation line is extremely simple. To quote Fischer, Scandinavian is weak.
@tameshrew469
@tameshrew469 2 жыл бұрын
I do feel like the study you have to put in to learn the ruy if you are good enough to actually understand the plans is definitely worth it. You have guaranteed small advantage even if black plays perfectly and usually a +1 or more if black plays inaccurately or some dodgy sideline. And once you have that advantage and know how to nurture it and grow it, your opponent is kinda helpless. There is a reason they call it "the Spanish squeeze". It's an opening for life. I want to take like a year to study it fully (I'm about 1800) because once I have I'll have an opening I can play for life and get great positions and lots of wins where I just get a small steady advantage and squeeze black till he resigns.
@bladefox5082
@bladefox5082 Жыл бұрын
My most common openings as white are the Ruy Lopez and the English 😭😭😭
@FrankieplayzWasTaken
@FrankieplayzWasTaken Жыл бұрын
U can debate
@jeromebarry1741
@jeromebarry1741 Жыл бұрын
I had White in a U.S. Open against a man who had Bobby Fischer's scalp. I played 1.c4 and lost. I was on a team playing a correspondence game with Sammy Reshevsky. It was in progress when he died. We had Black and had an even position from a Gruenfeld opening.
@whuwhaaa2
@whuwhaaa2 2 жыл бұрын
I think the problem with the English opening is the move g3 on move 3. Playing c4 right away isn't really the problem, and I actually think the English is a really good opening for beginners to learn as long as you don't play g3 on move 3 and instead play Nf3. The reason being after 1.c4, e5 2. Nc3, c6 all you have to do is play Nf3 to refute the d5 on blacks third turn. That way if black tries to force the issue with d5 on turn on 3, then they simply lose a pawn, and if they don't then they wasted a move developing their c6 pawn which is probably a better square for the Knight after Nf3. The engine actually gives white a slight advantage in this position. Basically, you don't need to play the Reti opening in order to refute blacks early d5 push. You just need to play Nf3 on the third move. If they prepped 2. c6 3. d5 then you walk away with a development lead and if they didn't then you can just play the English normally. It also converts into a reversed Sicilian really easily which usually hampers blacks development.
@marcofrey2903
@marcofrey2903 2 жыл бұрын
What's your rating? I need practice against the English.
@quantumedge492
@quantumedge492 2 жыл бұрын
This video is just levy flexing how may opening variations he knows
@MarceloSiqueiraLima_CdC
@MarceloSiqueiraLima_CdC 2 жыл бұрын
The Sicilian Defense is difficult for both Black and White and this makes up for White's game.
@Facino
@Facino 2 жыл бұрын
Please don't be Scandi. Please don't be Scandi..... It's all I play into e4
@Ateafe
@Ateafe Жыл бұрын
No take the pawn, then I can crush them in the opening
@MrLawrenceJShirley
@MrLawrenceJShirley Жыл бұрын
I usually don't comment on chess videos but I can't help myself with this one. THANK YOU!!! Although your speaking pace is a bit fast, you really had a lot to say for 800 players to think about! I will need to watch this video a few more times, but your clarity on what to consider playing at my level is spot on! Even more important is the way you discussed the priorities for the average player to consider. I have been focusing on a 4 Knights philosophy which gives me lots of opportunities, but I am now reconsidering my philosophy to align with what you have identified as priorities. I'll get back to you in a few weeks and let you know what I think works well for me.
@vladusa
@vladusa 2 жыл бұрын
Ruy Lopez with bishop a4 is great. It develops tactical positioning.
@agnesmasih8277
@agnesmasih8277 2 жыл бұрын
ya but hard to learn
@tameshrew469
@tameshrew469 2 жыл бұрын
@@agnesmasih8277 hard to learn but worth it. Also learning ruy Lopez teaches you so much about chess in general.
@agnesmasih8277
@agnesmasih8277 2 жыл бұрын
@@tameshrew469 italian is easier to learn and teaches you as much about chess
@andrewqi6695
@andrewqi6695 2 жыл бұрын
@@tameshrew469 but the London also exists
@sumumu1995
@sumumu1995 2 жыл бұрын
I agree and disagree with Levy The "hard opening" such as Ruy or Najdorf leads to various structures, for each position you can't play three games and then improve. So it takes a lot of time to play and analyze the games in different kinds of positions. You may not feel your improvement since there is a lot of work needed to be done first. However, as a 2-year Najdorf player. I feel myself knowing the main line as well as the sidelines gradually since I play a lot of games in different positions. And thanks to the variety of the positions in Najdorf, I think I have become a better "chess player" instead of only good at some openings. So I think you can play whatever opening you want, just stick to it and play a lot of games, you'll feel the improvement.
@blazer7731
@blazer7731 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, but I think this video is more targeted towards beginners or intermediate players who will most likely not want to study all the lines or just not play a shit ton to face all the possible options
@sumumu1995
@sumumu1995 2 жыл бұрын
@@blazer7731 Yeah but the thing is your opponents don't know the theory either XD. So I think you should not study too much before playing, you play and then study. I think the best way is to treat the courses and GM repertoires as dictionaries instead of textbooks. After you play a game, you check the courses and learn the main ideas, but do not study what you don't face.
@adriano_jly
@adriano_jly Жыл бұрын
Thank you for everything! Chess is getting much more fun with all the knowledge you share with us🔥
@colincampbell7928
@colincampbell7928 2 ай бұрын
I've just started getting into chess. Awesome videos sir.
@mstalcup
@mstalcup 2 жыл бұрын
Superb insight! Contrarily, sometimes I like to take the approach of entering a dark forest and applying theory when I've learned it and principles and calculation when I can. That's why I have played the Ruy Lopez as white for such a long time, even welcoming the Marshall. Indeed, the number of variations is staggering. I feel, no matter the number of variations within choice of opening, it is the dark forest element of play of the game that makes me love it.
@yaboi6851
@yaboi6851 2 жыл бұрын
exactly. chess is at its best when it's crazy and complicated. i don't know why you would want it to be simple.
@agnesmasih8277
@agnesmasih8277 2 жыл бұрын
@@yaboi6851 because you win more
@emrevurgun8328
@emrevurgun8328 Жыл бұрын
I actually spent a huge amount of time studying all possible lines of ruy as a 1300 but i think its worth it because it was fun and i like the opening.
@its0dill659
@its0dill659 Жыл бұрын
if it is fun, keep doing it?
@emrevurgun8328
@emrevurgun8328 Жыл бұрын
@@its0dill659 i guess :D my only problem is the berlin though i dont enjoy playing against it.
@tabby7189
@tabby7189 Жыл бұрын
If you like the positions you get, maybe it would be worth your while to put in the work and study the subtleties.
@emrevurgun8328
@emrevurgun8328 Жыл бұрын
@@tabby7189 for sure will do that.
@superman198224
@superman198224 2 жыл бұрын
I’ve been fighting Wally for about 9 months now. I use the London. Only the London. Maybe I need a new opening…
@omodo-a
@omodo-a 2 жыл бұрын
I quit the London for the Vienna Gambit, more success
@randomdude9135
@randomdude9135 2 жыл бұрын
I've beaten Wally only once
@kugelblitzingularity304
@kugelblitzingularity304 2 жыл бұрын
If you are willing to look, there are a lot of wacky things you can do even if you play the London. For instance, in acc London, if they go c5, you can try dxc5, and you get completely different lines now, or if they copycat with Bc5 2nd move, you can go c4 immediately or later. Both examples are engine supported, and guaranteed to surprise your opponent
@superman198224
@superman198224 2 жыл бұрын
@@randomdude9135 I’ve messed up a win about 10 times during the endgame. Once I had mate in 4 and blew it.
@DavidEmerling79
@DavidEmerling79 2 жыл бұрын
There is power in knowing the complexities of a particular opening. One's choice in an opening cannot simply be that it's "easy to learn." If it's easy for you - then it's likely easy for your opponent. If the first several moves are practically "forced" with few branches, then all you're doing is kicking the can down the road where, inevitably, your opponent will have a bewildering number of options. Yes, the first several moves of the Scotch are pretty simple and straightforward but, at some point, it will become complex. It always does. Heck, even the most drawish of openings - and one that is very easy to learn - like the Slav Exchange - gets complex with many nuances at some point. It's chess. It's going to get complex at some point. I guess one has to decide if they want that complexity to happen later rather than sooner. For instance, I play the Traxler Counter Attack against the Italian Knight Attack. It's complicated - yes. But I have studied those complexities. I remember beating my first 2000+ rated opponent, when I was only 1500 by playing the black side of the Traxler. I didn't defeat him because I was a better player than he was. I defeated him because I was booked-up better than he was. He risked much when he played 5.Nxf7. Players with much higher ratings than their opponent should avoid book lines so as to avoid being out-booked instead of out-played.
@SeaPhoenix01
@SeaPhoenix01 27 күн бұрын
1.Understanding the opening and all the plans 2.Practically, how many lines it has, how much do you need to study 3.How common is it? You learned all the variations but at you level they even play it?
@Wltrwllyngaeiou
@Wltrwllyngaeiou 2 жыл бұрын
Learning a principled opening with rich theory is great for beginners, it allows you to grow into the opening as you improve. Learning a trappy one-trick pony opening is the only bad choice in my opinion.
@jdstripes
@jdstripes 2 жыл бұрын
Well said.
@digineet8421
@digineet8421 Жыл бұрын
Totally agree. And as you get better the gruenfeld, KID, and Dragon as he suggests will take waaayyyy more studying to just not lose. He also suggests the Albin in this video and the wing gambit in his course which with proper play are losing. I used to play the vienna and the most common thing I faced was the Nc6 declined lines which are incredibly drawish. I have been picking up the Ruy Lopez and I always feel like I've won the opening phase. I have a strong center, active pieces, tons of plans to attempt, and even if its closed the pawn structure tells me what to do. I do worse in positions with symmetrical structures and no obvious plans. The semi slav is way more solid than he makes it sound as long as you know how to activate your bishop. The botvinnik is insane but you can just play the Cambridge springs until you are ready to take that on.
@redlancer7263
@redlancer7263 2 жыл бұрын
Now we need a 4 easiest
@rayhanplayz968
@rayhanplayz968 2 ай бұрын
Js play the London
@harmannatsingh3933
@harmannatsingh3933 2 жыл бұрын
This guy really just ranked the ruy lopez as worse than the Saragossa opening 💀
@nivnavion
@nivnavion 2 жыл бұрын
he didn't say it worse, he said to avoid them
@awaedin
@awaedin 7 ай бұрын
You can't play the dragon without knowing what you're doing - you'll be eviscerated by the Yugoslav attack.
@cheguevara7478
@cheguevara7478 2 жыл бұрын
The best way to do things is learn 3 openings. White, black e4, white e4. I learnt English, Sicilian and Indian. For more advanced games you may need a counter for English or other advanced openings. I should say, if you play well as white, then king’s English is utterly pathetic. I’m pretty sure that you can accept the queen’s gambit if you play well
@abhinandanbanerjee5471
@abhinandanbanerjee5471 2 жыл бұрын
KID and Sicilian Dragon as Black (you have to know sidelines and relevant main lines obviously) and Catalan as Black. I'm 2130 rapid Lichess and I have not played any other opening since I was 1650 back on 2018. Your ratings shoot up when you know what to do in the opening and middlegame.
@shouryaaswal5681
@shouryaaswal5681 2 жыл бұрын
I don't suggest KID because if opponent knows theory then KID is just bad. My win rate against KID is 76% because I know KID theory (tried to learn it before I switched to slav)
@abhinandanbanerjee5471
@abhinandanbanerjee5471 2 жыл бұрын
@@shouryaaswal5681 ya but there's a bunch of lines where you can trade into an equal position out of the endgame. You can usually tell by the tenth move what you're up against. In the slav, its much harder to play for a win when your opponent does not know what to do.
@chesspotato
@chesspotato 2 жыл бұрын
I tink there are better choices than going into the Catalan as black , but KID and dragon are good openings for intermidiate and low key advanced players.
@JT-xu1qd
@JT-xu1qd 2 жыл бұрын
​@@shouryaaswal5681 I don't suggest any opening because if opponent knows theory (better than you do) then any opening is just bad? Most would agree the KID is not a good suggestion for beginners, but that's because it doesn't reinforce the basic principles and pretty much teaches bad habits. However, that is not what defines a bad opening within the context of the video. It's also not like the benchmark for a "good opening" was stated as "you don't need to know any theory at all". From the perspective of "is it worth it to learn the theory I NEED to learn in order to play this opening with success?"(which seemed to be the angle), the KID is fine. Also, you might have a win rate of 76% against the kid, but that doesn't mean your opponents have only 24% win rate with KID. Just because the KID is "bad" against you specifically, doesn't mean that it is "bad" across the board. You are using anecdotal evidence to support a general conclusion/claim, which is a fallacy.
@abhinandanbanerjee5471
@abhinandanbanerjee5471 2 жыл бұрын
My actual point was not which specific opening I play. Its that if you want to improve you need to create a repertoire and stick to it.
@evantm2588
@evantm2588 2 жыл бұрын
Nice call on the kan sicillian . I used to play dragon and its super strong until about 1600 when f3 systems just are miserable. The kan is very good and the theory doesn't have to be too dense as all e6 sicillians are super similar like taimanov and kan always transpose.
@gefitrop3496
@gefitrop3496 2 жыл бұрын
Ngl f3 is blissful as white
@noammosek1319
@noammosek1319 2 жыл бұрын
As an E4 player, I despise playing against Kans, so it's a great weapon to have
@hector9586
@hector9586 2 жыл бұрын
I mean, online you would just find anti sicilians not many play open sicilian.
@evantm2588
@evantm2588 2 жыл бұрын
@@hector9586 most people don't know how to play anti sicillians and it can be easy to equalise as black, if they play the open however if they know more than black it will always be tough to equalise. So if you're white if you wanna challenge the sicillian probably Check them in a prep battle
@hector9586
@hector9586 2 жыл бұрын
@@evantm2588 lichess database as well Chessbase gives the Alapin bigger win rates at 53%, goes higher on lower ratings the most common move is Nc6 and it's terrible even there are lines with 60%, Alapin particularly is extremely easy to play you just want to control the center and get space and avoid black development, even some lines marozcy bind is difficult to play against.
@woodenfences
@woodenfences Жыл бұрын
This must be one of your most helpful videos for the student facing Opening Theory. Thank you!
@Abidos234
@Abidos234 Жыл бұрын
As a matter of fact, by using one of the so called "Worst Chess Openings", which is also VERY complicated to learn, Nepo won 2 or 3 game within the 2023 tournament for the World Chess Crown against Ding, right?
@raedshaheen2009
@raedshaheen2009 4 ай бұрын
Man grünfeld defense is OP
@emmettforrestel1071
@emmettforrestel1071 2 жыл бұрын
Put Levi on 1.75x speed it’s so funny
@shouryaaswal5681
@shouryaaswal5681 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you levy, I see so many beginners make this mistake. Specially after the queens gambit, everyone wants to play sicillain and then lose and quit chess
@webbowser8834
@webbowser8834 2 жыл бұрын
I have to admit, I've made the mistake of playing into QGA without knowing the line. I'm addicted to D4/D5 openers like the Scandinavian Defense.
@philiproschactor
@philiproschactor 2 жыл бұрын
As always, Gotham, another piece of brilliance from you. Each of these openings you mentioned I was nodding my head and laughing in agreement. The Roy Lopez is more complex than astrophysics, the Queen's Gambit accepted is a bear trap, and to even attempt the Naidorf is indeed attempting to scale Everest. I love the passion you have for the game and the exceptional verbal communication skills you have. Your videos are always so informative and genuinely entertaining. You're a brilliant teacher. Thanks again so much.👏
@AllThatsLeft24
@AllThatsLeft24 9 ай бұрын
Playing classical openings like Ruy Lopez and queens gambit is far better for improving than stuff London and Caro kann. Also, you can easily play ruy Lopez with d3 after Nf6 avoiding complex theory.
@Levc81
@Levc81 6 ай бұрын
Controlling the centre early is paramount
@elgoog-the-third
@elgoog-the-third Жыл бұрын
And what for people who use their brains instead of learning every possibility by heart?
@exoticboii5818
@exoticboii5818 2 жыл бұрын
Real ones know this is a re-upload
@FrankieplayzWasTaken
@FrankieplayzWasTaken Жыл бұрын
I love the ruy lopez
@UdyKumra
@UdyKumra 2 жыл бұрын
I'm glad you made a video telling people to stop playing the Ruy Lopez because it means I might get to stop dealing with such an annoying opening lol
@marcofrey2903
@marcofrey2903 2 жыл бұрын
1400 ELO, Here are my favorite openings: White: Italian Game: Evans Gambit, Max Lange Attack (sharp) or Nahkmanson (fun!). Fried Liver if it's Classical. Against Sicilian: Smith Morra Black: Vs e4: Scandinavian Bronstein Variation, Petroff for Classical, or Stafford for fun. Vs d4: QGD going for Cambridge Defense (fun traps). I used to play Albin Countergambit. Vs London, I enjoy early queen b6 lines. Vs c4: Still working on a Reversed Sicilian repertoire. I still kinda sigh when I see this on the board. Just thought I'd share! Passionate about my choices and I took time to cultivate this repertoire, so I'm happy to answer questions or share my reasonings.
@cjxchess17
@cjxchess17 2 жыл бұрын
I knew a coach who never even played tournament chess, and he was recommending the grunfeld to players around 1100-1300. After a tournament where dropped from the 1900s to the 1800s, losing to many weaker players, my parents decided that it was their playstyle that caused my defeat. So they took me for a few sessions with the coach I mentioned above, and he, who’s strongest students is like 1700, also recommended me the grunfeld (I was playing the KID back then) It took a year as my rating continued to drop for other reasons to get back to the 1900s level, but 2 more months later, I reached 2000 and said goodbye to the 1000s. Looking back, this change was one of the key reasons I was able to crack 2000 as I realized how limiting the KID is for black when white plays counters like the f3 or h3 variations. If the grunfeld is bad for beginners, than the KID may be even worse. F3 or H3 and if you don’t know key lines you will be passively defending the entire game.
@anuragmandke95
@anuragmandke95 2 жыл бұрын
I really like your videos, they made me take interest in chess!!
@jonathanhenderson9422
@jonathanhenderson9422 2 жыл бұрын
I'll disagree on the Ruy. Yes, black has a lot of options but a lot of the same ideas apply to many of those options and at my level (~1800 online) I rarely find black players knowing any of the sidelines well enough, nor are most of them dangerous enough, to torch a Ruy player who understands most of the Ruy's fundamental ideas. Plus, the Ruy is really all about fundamental principles like fighting for control of the center so it's one of the best openings to train those fundamentals while also allowing you opportunities to figure out novelties at the board rather than just learning a few lines by rote. Scotch and Vienna are fantastic as well but I just love the complex positions I end up in with the Ruy that challenge my positional knowledge and tactical calculation.
@tameshrew469
@tameshrew469 2 жыл бұрын
Also another advantage is the thousands of brilliant gm games and lectures you can use to study from. Saint Louis chess club has great videos on ruy Lopez. This is the main thing I like about studying main lines. You don't have to buy some course you can enjoy going through the history of chess and learning at the same time. The Kasparov Karpov ruy Lopez games are simply amazing as are the bobby Fischer games.
@tameshrew469
@tameshrew469 2 жыл бұрын
Also yeah if you are a good positional player (which you will become if you play the ruy) you have a big advantage against those who are good at tactics but don't really understand pawn structures and manoeuvreing and you can easily just get an overwhelming positional advantage just applying ideas.
@jonathanhenderson9422
@jonathanhenderson9422 2 жыл бұрын
@@tameshrew469 Both great points, Ivan. I guess the only "counter-argument" would be is that many of these same points also apply to The Italian and Scotch and both have a lot less theory to study/learn. I think much of it depends on how much you as a player enjoy being in novel (to you) positions where you have to use your positional knowledge to figure things out OTB rather than just by having memorized best moves. The Ruy offers endless opportunities to learn positional chess; the Italian offers many too (not as much as Ruy) and The Scotch some but less. I do agree, though, that I often find myself in Ruy games where I get an advantage just by knowing the positional ideas better even when I'm out of book before move 10.
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