| General Chess Discussion - Silman's Complete Endgame Course @ChessPriyome said in #28: > Personally, I gauge a book by how often I actuaslly use it. ... [Event "rated classical game"] [Site "https://lichess.org/KFwiqEWH"] [Date "2022.03.19"] [Black "ChessPriyo… | |
| General Chess Discussion - Silman's Complete Endgame Course @lizani said in #25: > Never trust a chess book with complete in the title. > Dr John Nunn wrote a book on ... Speaking of Dr John Nunn: "... Some recent books that I enjoyed and can recommend include… | |
| General Chess Discussion - Silman's Complete Endgame Course "... before discussing the specifics of Dvoretsky's Endgame Manual ..., a word of warning is in order. I must emphasize that this is a terribly advanced work that I don't think is a very good way for … | |
| General Chess Discussion - What's best in a chess game - the endgame or nothing?? "... Review each of your games, identifying opening (and other) mistakes with the goal of not repeatedly making the same mistake. ... It is especially critical not to continually fall into opening tra… | |
| General Chess Discussion - "The 1700-1800 Rating Trap: Why it's the hardest barrier to break, and how to do it" ️️ Maybe, you can find something useful at https://lichess.org/forum/general-chess-discussion/how-to-improve-18 or https://lichess.org/forum/general-chess-discussion/i-need-advice?page=2. | |
| General Chess Discussion - Is there openings that are really better than others? For humans, chess is about avoiding mistakes and luring the opponent to make a mistake. There can be evolution in what openings are good for these purposes. "... [Evans' Gambit] is attributed to a Cap… | |
| General Chess Discussion - What's best in a chess game - the endgame or nothing?? "... The game might be divided into three parts, i.e.:- 1. The opening. 2. The middle-game. 3. The end-game. There is one thing you must strive for, to be equally efficient in the three parts. Whether… | |
| General Chess Discussion - Is it usefull to analyse won games, if... @tpr said in #52: > 'You may learn much more from a game you lose than from a game you win' - Capablanca Perhaps Capablanca chose the word, "may", for a reason. @tpr said in #52: > 'People who want to… | |
| General Chess Discussion - how to analyse a game, step by step method, how to remeber the mistakes and burn them in your mind @advanced_boi said in #44: > ... now can you tell me ho w to burn the patterns into ur brain I think that the main thing is to try to understand what you are trying to remember. Now that I understand … | |
| General Chess Discussion - how to make a repertoire "... I am not a big fan of weaker players memorizing lots of opening lines they will never play. However, it is quite a different issue to spend a small amount of time learning how to play your openin… | |
| Next |
|---|