I honestly can’t believe it, I was outside doing yard work when I had the thought “Damn, I need to get good at knowing the squares when I play” then I come inside and bam, a notification for this video. Insane.
I'm a begginer and I've been playing chess for 2-3months. And I can proudly say that I can remember every move and the coordinates of each pieces from the Paul Morphy Opera Game, although it's only a 17 move game there still is room for improvement.
Isn't it technically everybodies thing since if it exists in one dimension then it exists in all. So even if there is the smallest of odds that it is somebody's thing, then there would be a 'verse for it and it would then exist for all? Quantum mechanics is not something I know, so don't shoot me if I am wrong.
Either you're an expert troll and totally just owned my basic ass troll with this, or you're gonna win over me by pulling me out of my own troll-mode as I say "yes yes I absolutely agree". Very suspicious. Although, the way you said " 'verse " right there was superb.
This guy is sincerely trying to help us master Chess. And Chess is a game worth mastering (not just learning). Let's thank him! Thank you, GothamChess!
Wait, you see black’s POV as the ‘normal’ way reading letters alphabetically right to left and counting down from top to bottom?! This has blown my mind.
Yeah, that kinda seems like a counterintuitive way to teach it. Personally I think it’s better to teach from white’s perspective so you’re going in alphabetical order from left to right because that’s more “cognitively ergonomic”
Not having played chess for years, when it was all 'Pawn to King Two,' etc, I memorised the squares by giving them names: H and A - Heavy Artillery (Rooks sort of are...) G and B - Galahad and Bedivere (Knights of the Round Table) F and C - Faith and Church (Bishops) E - Emperor D - Drottning - Swedish for Queen (or Dronning in the closely related Norwegian - tribute to Magnus Carlsen!) Then I promptly forgot them all...
@@Kh79797 In descriptive notation, as was used by this comment, ranks are numbered 1 to 8 from near to far for both players. For instance, the second rank from White's side would be numbered 2 for White and 7 for Black. For both players, their pawns start on rank 2, and pawns can only move forward, so neither player can play P-K2.
Great video! I got over my last plateau in chess by improving board visualization and it’s crazy that just knowing the names of squares and saying them to yourself whilst playing stops you from dropping not only pieces but important pawns in your camp
Please more of these! I just started on Lichess after playing some as a kid, I'm 34 now, and my rating is around 1400, but some of my moves are like 1900 moves and some are like 300 lol. So basically I blunder or make huge inaccuracies alot because I don't see things fast enough. This type of chess talk helps me the most. Thanks for doing this, and other ones about ending patterns, raising your rank, beginner strategies, etc.
This is me except I DO visualize the board very well. The issue is sometimes I just dont care to check any other pieces and only the one i just moved (tunnel visioned)
3:30 just realized after so many chess videos... I Never thought about Controlling empty squares over trying to Control the squares that have enemy pieces occupying them or Controlling the battlefield before the war starts. Not sure why but i never thought about empty squares in the right way until it was worded how you did in this video.
I don't often comment on videos, but this one requires me to compliment you, Levy. I took up chess again a month ago. I found many great videos, but yours are particularly good. It is hard to believe how quickly this old retired guy is picking up the game, mostly thanks to you. This one might be the most educational, unique video on the interwebs. Huzzah, sir! Very well done indeed. I'm a subscriber, and deeply in your debt.
For me the hardest thing is remembering the names for the squares, b5 a2, etc.. because of the way they flip depending on whether you are playing as white or black. But ironically I seem to be able to find them a bit faster when the coordinates are _not_ on the board, because when the coordinates are there I go looking for them first, but when they're not there I just visualise where they _should_ be.
Along with memorizing openings, this has historically been the hardest part in chess for me, so thank you. EDIT: Nailed all exercises yet except the second one.
Are the first examples meant to be solved without looking at the board? Just imagining the board in your head and playing the moves in your head right?
For 14:11 I said d1, because although it is not a square of importance right now it has 4 pieces controlling it, both rooks the queen and the knight on e3
I just trace it with my eyes. Or I can just use audiation. Your brain has the info, you just can’t consciously see it. We have ways around actually seeing things in our heads.
you can try to understand the patterns of the squares and the geometry of the board without seeing it, how the diagonals are linked together, and how the board can be divided into many parts that are easier to understand, I can't project images either but I can feel the organization of the board, I'm learning it right now and what I said above is what I'm doing, I'm pretty confident it will work
Yes, you're right. However, the point in analyzing the control of squares is to overthrow your opponent. Black can't get to c3, so you shouldn't really care if the c3 square have control or not. It's like the point of caring about the control of squares that will allow you to advance in the game, or controlling squares to diminish your opp's activity. I guess he could've stated that.
I loved that this only touched the surfice and there is so much to be learned here. Primarily, the names of the squares at lightning speed. I think that listening to a audio game with the board or pc in front of you and with and then without coordenated would make for a killer exercise! That will be my lesson for tomorrow!! Draw up a paper with the squares and name them. Also make tiny papers with the names and place them on the board (the papers being taken randomly out of a pile).
In the second real game example, on 13:53, isn't the best protected square f1? Protected by the king, the bishop, the knight and the rook, so 4 times! AM I THE NEXT LEVY ROZMAN???!?!
I’m no IM but one thing that’s helped me massively is committing master games to memory and playing through them move by move in my head, asking myself questions like “where are the rooks as of move 21” or “does white have any checks or captures as of move 14” or “what squares does blacks queen see in move 15” it’s made a massive improvement in my visualisation and I encourage others to try it out!
Hopefully this helps people also learning. I've been a fan of chess for a while but could never follow the square names well, just casually watched chess videos. Decided to learn chess notation too and the way I've just quickly learned the square names is using a physical board (get a cheap one from Amazon). There are many chess books that analyse great games, (I'm reading 'The Mammoth Book of the worlds greatest chess games' and on a kindle with a stand for convenience but any will do). Playing out the games and moving pieces following notation will quickly help you learn the places and within about 10 games you will notice how quickly you find the square. Once you get comfortable, play the next games out from blacks perspective switching it up (or just play from the colour that is the winner). So I'm learning notation, squares and tactics and openings all within a short a time, plus it's fun. Also this book advised getting a second board because they play through potential ideas or why an idea would not work etc, you can keep the actual game on board while using the second board to play out the other notated ideas. I'm not even a quarter of the way through the book and have picked up quite a lot. For shorter ideas out of the game in question, maybe only 5 moves ahead, I've followed the notation in my head visualising rather than playing out on the second board and that has helped a lot. Thought I'd share for others out there just wanting to improve too.
One trick I realized is that if you want to know the color of a square and you don’t have a board, you can turn the letter part of the square’s coordinate into a number (like a = 1, b = 2, etc.) and add that to the number side of the coordinate. If the number is even; then the square is black and if it’s off then it’s white. For example, e4 would be 5 + 4 because e is the fifth letter of the alphabet, which equals 9, which is odd, meaning e4 is a white square
Amazing Videos as always i always wanted to learn chess but I never really knew how to get better until i saw this channel thank you so much keep up the good work
This is one of the most important things I think I’ve taken away from your teachings. I can’t thank you enough for making the whole developing my chess game fun and exciting.
Great video and more would be appreciated. I've started working on naming squares. The big take away for me was at the end, when you talked about where opponents pieces could go and who was protecting. This is the next level of visualization I want to get to. Thinking about where my pieces are attacking and could be attacked from currently as well as when the board changes, not simply naming where my pieces can legally move.
6:09 No need to count, just take the symetry of the movements into account. Since no movement of the Queen is blocked, all squares at her sight would depend on how far from the closest edge the Queen is. Right on the edge -> 21 squares, add 2 squares on sight for every square away. All possible amount of squares are {21, 23, 25, 27}. Here it's 25.
Hey - I’m new to your channel. Just wanted you to know that you’re REALLY good at this. You do an excellent job of breaking down concepts and helping folks build their skills in an entertaining way. Looking forward to following your work.
When I started wanting to memorize the squares by heart I coded a small webapp where it tells you what square to click and then you have to click it. That helped a lot, also knowing the squares of your standard opening moves makes it easier to quicker zone in on other, lesser "well known" squares.
"Looking ahead in the future, changing the position in your mind and deciding whether to make a move or not" I have aphantasia. I don't like this game.
I think you forgot to put time stamps in the description, I only see "Intro 0:00". But it's a great video!! Thanks for all the content you've been releasing lately, it's great
Such an essential skill in chess, but somehow barely anyone talks about it and one just finds very little content about it. Thank you for the very instructive and entertaining video.
8:00 This just reminded me of the "Oh so you like X? Name every Y" meme. "Oh, so you're an advanced chess player? Name every square your pieces are on."
It's indeed a lot harder, but I can sort off trace lines with my eyes - it's just a lot to keep track of, because I have to remember which pieces will be gone..
This is more of a novice chess lesson, but I like his examples. For at least 30 years I have known by heart the chess notation of each square, from either side. Visualizing where a knight can go in 3 moves is not too difficult. There is a knight move visualization exercise that I have given to my students: Put black pawns on c6, f6, c3, and f3. Put a white knight on a1. Only the white knight moves. The rule is that the knight cannot land on the black pawns, nor can it land on the capture squares of the black pawn. Then the goal is to get from a1 to b1. There is one way to do it in 3 moves: Na1-c2-a3-b1. The next goal is to go from b1 to c1: Much trickier. Nb1-a3-c2-d4-b3-c1. Then proceed to squares d1, e1, f1, g1, had h1. From there the next squares are h2, f2, c2, and a2 skipping over the forbidden squares. Then it is a3 to h3, and after that h4 to a4 until you have done the entire board. This is an exercise that many people find quite difficult. With practice, I can do the entire board in 3 minutes, but I might be a little rusty right now. Whereas many people find the knight a difficult piece to visualize, doing this exercise has made the knight my favorite piece.
This is wonderful, I really appreciated this kind of content, it's much easier practising this way than doing it alone. And it's waaay more enjoyable, thank you very much, I'll consider this as a Christmas present!
i would love a book of puzzles specifically helping with blind fold chess. i,ve played chess for years and was practising the coordinates and also square colours and was surprised to see d5 was white i thought it was a dark square after thousands of games i should know what colour each square is and also know the co ordinates immediately so tnx for this video levy . i think i will learn the sqaures and practise blinfold until i can play with all the pieces its a good skill to have and it will help dramatically with normal chess
The best visualization i have for nights is you can make a check-mark or an N in 3 moves with a knight. This is a really good set up to show the complete pathways of a knight. It shows more than them just weaving back and forth. Another good pattern is putting the queen on e4 instead of f5. its another 3 move combo that kind of looks like a snake coiling up.
Two comments - if you are a little stronger and don't need the first section to learn algebraic notation/have done similar exercises, try noting down the piece positions and doing it blindfold for an extra challenge. Second comment is feedback for Levy - I think for the game examples, it could be very instructive to not draw colors or arrows, and instead describe only by notation. This would force viewers to see more in their heads and could be better to prepare for OTB chess calculation since it's more similar. I remember being forced by my coach to sit on my hands and not touch the pieces, and he would describe the variations to me for game analysis.
But then beginners would be like "This is chinese to me... this goes too fast... he's losing me" and they'll just leave to other content. I know that's what I'd do...
You have an extraordinary gift for teaching. Besides the obvious experience, which many have, you entertain as well, and humor opens many doors of perception.
“Blindfold chess is a beautiful sight”
Levy Rozman 2020
Great quote
I see...
@@reshzy3807 but you're blindfolded so I guess you don't
@@tr1gger810 His joke but worse
Wow. Very eye-opening.
13:48 "I want you to pause the video..."
* pauses video * Okay, what do I do now. Levy? Levy?
L O L
thats a bit super obedient to pause the video right before he says "not yet" the second after.
*Pauses video* Speak to me Levy
Bruh
Did the same thing, kinda hard to understand what this video is about, guess I need to work on my telepathy skill first
Visualisation in brief: Hikaru looking in the ceiling to think. Lol
Who? This doesn’t make sense lmao
@@jahnbee7436 if you are able to memorize the whole board, staring at the board while calculating is not necessary, although sometimes still helpful.
@@jahnbee7436 you missed the joke
I think Hikaru usually just visualizes the pieces being set up for the next game, which I'll _also_ mark down as a win. - j q t -
Hikaru is looking at stockfish on the monitor above
Weird how you think the coordinates are "wonky" for white. It's the exact opposite for me.
@Shawn Bliss keep in mind that Levy is Jewish and knows Hebrew
@@trollyh4ck3r59 gnitseretni mmh
same
I thought he was being sarcastic!
@@trollyh4ck3r59 I'm jewish and i know hebrew but i agree with the above comment what's your point
Stoooop it at 14:30 I said “central squares” not some random f1/d1/c1 😂
Don't you have C3 with also 3 lines of sight? queen, pawn, knight? Or is C3 not a central square?
I need this so bad
Ok
How many squares Black controls? 35?
Figured that answer wouldn't be sensible, but that went over my head :D
6:00 : So I tried to draw arrows, but my opponent stopped me saying it was bad for the chessboard
B R U H
Stupit 🤣🤣
@@guyonYTube Bud lmao I think you just r/whoosed yourself hahah what I said was a joke to something Gotham has said before which is "Stupit" with a T
@@guyonYTube Not really... but pop off.
Obviously they don't want you to get better.
I honestly can’t believe it, I was outside doing yard work when I had the thought “Damn, I need to get good at knowing the squares when I play” then I come inside and bam, a notification for this video. Insane.
r/thatHappened
@@MarcusChad I’m in that subreddit believe it or not idc
Law of attraction
@@MarcusChad r/ihavereddit
You're connected man!
The hardest part in about this video was trying to say the Alphabet backwards
I thought I was the only dumb one who could not do it effortlessly
I have to count from A to H in order to count it backward.
I swear that was what I struggled with most! Lol
tebahpla ehT
sdrawkcab tebahplA
What a lovely Christmas present, two Gotham vids a day
I guess we were not naughty this year. Not a single one of us...
It is technically 3 vids in a day for me lol
He visibly tries to avoid all the christmas songs and all the mood by nerding with chess on YT
Levi
I'm a begginer and I've been playing chess for 2-3months. And I can proudly say that I can remember every move and the coordinates of each pieces from the Paul Morphy Opera Game, although it's only a 17 move game there still is room for improvement.
Nice
Cool! I wish i could do the same!!!!!
useless
@@meesheijmink5029 get a life bro, instead of putting people down, actually give them advice
@@dzdraco19 indeed
Man is a walking chess content machine like he literally uploads like 4 times a day
Plus he streams constantly, Levy does not fuck around
serious af
He’s smart, taking advantage of the extra interest in chess lately and he’s great so we all win
Like
Well... not literally.
"What square does white control the most? It's a tough one."
"D1 or C1?"
"D5" - Levy
"****"
"in the centre of the board" 13:50
i mean, its clearly F1, defended by the king, rook, knight, bishop
@@ProfGlitch D1, C1, and F1 are all controlled by the same number of pieces
C3 is also controlled three times but its not important.
@@ProfGlitch in fact F1 is only controlled by the bishop and the king, because if the king is taken, the game is finished 😂😅
"Looking ahead in the future, changing the position in your mind and deciding whether to make a move or not"
5d chess vibes
5d chess with multiverse time travel is a real thing, if that's your thing
@@alexanderreusens7633 if it's not my thing, does it still exist?
Isn't it technically everybodies thing since if it exists in one dimension then it exists in all. So even if there is the smallest of odds that it is somebody's thing, then there would be a 'verse for it and it would then exist for all? Quantum mechanics is not something I know, so don't shoot me if I am wrong.
Either you're an expert troll and totally just owned my basic ass troll with this, or you're gonna win over me by pulling me out of my own troll-mode as I say "yes yes I absolutely agree".
Very suspicious. Although, the way you said " 'verse " right there was superb.
@@bobbybobbatunday9959 *bang*
I've no idea what you talking about, but it certainly isnt QM.
This guy is sincerely trying to help us master Chess. And Chess is a game worth mastering (not just learning). Let's thank him! Thank you, GothamChess!
Wait, you see black’s POV as the ‘normal’ way reading letters alphabetically right to left and counting down from top to bottom?! This has blown my mind.
He likes reading manga
Levy is also Jewish, idk if he learned it but they write right to left in Hebrew
@@stuckupcurlyguy did learn it, he was born with it.
@@Alkuf100 Wait, Jews are born reading!?!?!?
Yeah, that kinda seems like a counterintuitive way to teach it. Personally I think it’s better to teach from white’s perspective so you’re going in alphabetical order from left to right because that’s more “cognitively ergonomic”
whoa that was creepy, i jumped ahead and he said "if you've jumped ahead here, welcome"
Visualization :)
Haha!
all i want for christmas is
Chess Visualizing: How To Remember Squares
Perfect. Thanks for your hard work brother.
Not having played chess for years, when it was all 'Pawn to King Two,' etc, I memorised the squares by giving them names:
H and A - Heavy Artillery (Rooks sort of are...)
G and B - Galahad and Bedivere (Knights of the Round Table)
F and C - Faith and Church (Bishops)
E - Emperor
D - Drottning - Swedish for Queen (or Dronning in the closely related Norwegian - tribute to Magnus Carlsen!)
Then I promptly forgot them all...
Woah dude this is actually genius, i'm going to use this now xd
According to wikipedia, algebraic notation was popularized in the English-speaking country in the 1970.
P-K2 is impossible; you can't move a pawn to your second rank.
@@isavenewspapers8890you can if you’re playing black
@@Kh79797 In descriptive notation, as was used by this comment, ranks are numbered 1 to 8 from near to far for both players. For instance, the second rank from White's side would be numbered 2 for White and 7 for Black. For both players, their pawns start on rank 2, and pawns can only move forward, so neither player can play P-K2.
Great video! I got over my last plateau in chess by improving board visualization and it’s crazy that just knowing the names of squares and saying them to yourself whilst playing stops you from dropping not only pieces but important pawns in your camp
teaching me the gosh darn alphabet again
abcdefgh
hgf-oh wait what again
Awesome video! A 67 y/o chess beginner, just found your channel! Thanks for a great lesson.
I love these kind of videos - I feel like I’m in a 1-on-1 lesson with Levy for free. Can’t ask for a better Christmas gift.
Insanely useful, one of the better videos about visualization
Levi at the beginning of the video: pause when I say pause
Me 50 minutes later, having still not finished the video:
This is way too underrated
Please more of these! I just started on Lichess after playing some as a kid, I'm 34 now, and my rating is around 1400, but some of my moves are like 1900 moves and some are like 300 lol. So basically I blunder or make huge inaccuracies alot because I don't see things fast enough. This type of chess talk helps me the most. Thanks for doing this, and other ones about ending patterns, raising your rank, beginner strategies, etc.
This is me except I DO visualize the board very well. The issue is sometimes I just dont care to check any other pieces and only the one i just moved (tunnel visioned)
@@o_sch ?
@@o_sch that isn’t visualizing the board well then lol
A great tutoring style. Kudos. Just the right sort of level. Not crazy complicated, not condescending, but rather confidence inspiring.
This is the first video on youtube on calculations which actually tells how to start with basics. Thanks.
For me best visualization exercise is just solving a lot of tactics everyday.
I strongly agree on that
And also looking at variations in books without moving the pieces on the board.
3:30 just realized after so many chess videos...
I Never thought about Controlling empty squares over trying to Control the squares that have enemy pieces occupying them or
Controlling the battlefield before the war starts.
Not sure why but i never thought about empty squares in the right way until it was worded how you did in this video.
Have you acquired brain damage at some point in your life? Or do you have some sort of cognitive disorder? Or, perhaps, are you under ten years old?
Your way of teaching is so simple it’s helped me so much
I don't often comment on videos, but this one requires me to compliment you, Levy. I took up chess again a month ago. I found many great videos, but yours are particularly good. It is hard to believe how quickly this old retired guy is picking up the game, mostly thanks to you. This one might be the most educational, unique video on the interwebs. Huzzah, sir! Very well done indeed. I'm a subscriber, and deeply in your debt.
Levy is easily the best and most expressive chess teacher on the tube. No one breaks it down for beginners quite like lev. Thanks man
For me the hardest thing is remembering the names for the squares, b5 a2, etc.. because of the way they flip depending on whether you are playing as white or black.
But ironically I seem to be able to find them a bit faster when the coordinates are _not_ on the board, because when the coordinates are there I go looking for them first, but when they're not there I just visualise where they _should_ be.
Along with memorizing openings, this has historically been the hardest part in chess for me, so thank you.
EDIT: Nailed all exercises yet except the second one.
Are the first examples meant to be solved without looking at the board? Just imagining the board in your head and playing the moves in your head right?
developing this skill makes learning lines easier
For 14:11 I said d1, because although it is not a square of importance right now it has 4 pieces controlling it, both rooks the queen and the knight on e3
The thumbnail is me thinking before playing a missed win
This is exactly what I've been looking for. Recently, I've been trying to play games from start to end on my mind, analyzing on board afterwards.
How to remember squares: don’t forget them
Levi it's almost a year now, when do I unpause the video.
@imconfused1712 no master Levi didn't order me to unpause, it stays paused unless captain Levi orders me
As a chessplayer with aphantasia this is easier said than done
I just trace it with my eyes. Or I can just use audiation. Your brain has the info, you just can’t consciously see it. We have ways around actually seeing things in our heads.
I can do these without seeing anything in my head by tracing with my eyes, and using my minds ear.
Potatoes O’Grotten pretty cool answer to help us aphants out! could you elaborate a little on what you mean by tracing with your eyes?
@@crissanc1403
Like, literally moving your eyes to aid your thinking.
you can try to understand the patterns of the squares and the geometry of the board without seeing it, how the diagonals are linked together, and how the board can be divided into many parts that are easier to understand, I can't project images either but I can feel the organization of the board, I'm learning it right now and what I said above is what I'm doing, I'm pretty confident it will work
You explained it so well i can't thank you enough ❤❤
First time I've talked out loud to myself to a video since Dora the Explorer. Great video Levy!
I watched the whole vid but that last couple of minutes on the last puzzle and revealing what pieces can see what after the movements was so powerful!
I find it so funny that I know a lot of chess theory but all that theory disappears when I’m actually playing 😭😭
I've asked about this a million times on your stream, finally it's here, thank you so much man!
14:35 d1 is defended 4 times rather than 3
same goes for f1
f1 is not an empty square but c1 is
@@lenguyenuchung2676 you're right
But Levy said a square in the center..
ngl. this was the only part of the video that just didn't make any sense.
Levy is such a good teacher. I really hope his road to GM is a success and he gets the milestone. Wish you all the success Levy!
14:05 wouldn't the square white controls the most also be c3, with the queen, knight and pawn?
My idea was C1 and D1, both controlled by two rooks, the queen, and one knight
Yeah thats a good point, too. Maybe he's saying d5 because its in the center of the board? 🤷♂
You would be right but at 13:53 he specifies that he's talking about in the center of the board.
@@master11050 ohhhh haha very true, thanks for pointing that out 👍
Yes, you're right. However, the point in analyzing the control of squares is to overthrow your opponent. Black can't get to c3, so you shouldn't really care if the c3 square have control or not. It's like the point of caring about the control of squares that will allow you to advance in the game, or controlling squares to diminish your opp's activity. I guess he could've stated that.
I loved that this only touched the surfice and there is so much to be learned here.
Primarily, the names of the squares at lightning speed. I think that listening to a audio game with the board or pc in front of you and with and then without coordenated would make for a killer exercise!
That will be my lesson for tomorrow!!
Draw up a paper with the squares and name them.
Also make tiny papers with the names and place them on the board (the papers being taken randomly out of a pile).
When I first learned algebraic notation, the first thing that occurred to me was, "Battleship"!
Levy you're amazing man. Every time I watch one of your videos I want to learn and push myself even more
Two videos a day, feels like it’s christmas al week
What i like from you is your articulation and the choice of words you use to explain things to your viewers, it's just easy to understand man
In the second real game example, on 13:53, isn't the best protected square f1? Protected by the king, the bishop, the knight and the rook, so 4 times! AM I THE NEXT LEVY ROZMAN???!?!
I’m no IM but one thing that’s helped me massively is committing master games to memory and playing through them move by move in my head, asking myself questions like “where are the rooks as of move 21” or “does white have any checks or captures as of move 14” or “what squares does blacks queen see in move 15” it’s made a massive improvement in my visualisation and I encourage others to try it out!
Hopefully this helps people also learning. I've been a fan of chess for a while but could never follow the square names well, just casually watched chess videos. Decided to learn chess notation too and the way I've just quickly learned the square names is using a physical board (get a cheap one from Amazon). There are many chess books that analyse great games, (I'm reading 'The Mammoth Book of the worlds greatest chess games' and on a kindle with a stand for convenience but any will do). Playing out the games and moving pieces following notation will quickly help you learn the places and within about 10 games you will notice how quickly you find the square. Once you get comfortable, play the next games out from blacks perspective switching it up (or just play from the colour that is the winner). So I'm learning notation, squares and tactics and openings all within a short a time, plus it's fun. Also this book advised getting a second board because they play through potential ideas or why an idea would not work etc, you can keep the actual game on board while using the second board to play out the other notated ideas. I'm not even a quarter of the way through the book and have picked up quite a lot. For shorter ideas out of the game in question, maybe only 5 moves ahead, I've followed the notation in my head visualising rather than playing out on the second board and that has helped a lot. Thought I'd share for others out there just wanting to improve too.
what the C4 gonna do to the bishop
My dumb ass: its obviously gonna explode 🙂
3:51 actually, if there arent any pieces blocking the trayectory of the rook, it always controls 14 squares.
For the example where he asked us which square white controlled the most I thought D8 because the rooks, queen, and knight on E6 where guarding it.
One trick I realized is that if you want to know the color of a square and you don’t have a board, you can turn the letter part of the square’s coordinate into a number (like a = 1, b = 2, etc.) and add that to the number side of the coordinate. If the number is even; then the square is black and if it’s off then it’s white. For example, e4 would be 5 + 4 because e is the fifth letter of the alphabet, which equals 9, which is odd, meaning e4 is a white square
Amazing Videos as always i always wanted to learn chess but I never really knew how to get better until i saw this channel thank you so much keep up the good work
This is one of the most important things I think I’ve taken away from your teachings. I can’t thank you enough for making the whole developing my chess game fun and exciting.
Great video and more would be appreciated. I've started working on naming squares. The big take away for me was at the end, when you talked about where opponents pieces could go and who was protecting. This is the next level of visualization I want to get to. Thinking about where my pieces are attacking and could be attacked from currently as well as when the board changes, not simply naming where my pieces can legally move.
How to remember squares: be titled lmao
6:09 No need to count, just take the symetry of the movements into account. Since no movement of the Queen is blocked, all squares at her sight would depend on how far from the closest edge the Queen is. Right on the edge -> 21 squares, add 2 squares on sight for every square away. All possible amount of squares are {21, 23, 25, 27}. Here it's 25.
Hey -
I’m new to your channel. Just wanted you to know that you’re REALLY good at this. You do an excellent job of breaking down concepts and helping folks build their skills in an entertaining way. Looking forward to following your work.
For the first knight exercise you can also do a4, b6, a8, c7, e8, g7, f5
When I started wanting to memorize the squares by heart I coded a small webapp where it tells you what square to click and then you have to click it. That helped a lot, also knowing the squares of your standard opening moves makes it easier to quicker zone in on other, lesser "well known" squares.
Thank you for these videos! They are some of the best chess lesson videos I can find. Not only are they educational, but are entertaining. Thank You!
Lol just found out I have aphantasia, can't do this.
Nice.
I guess you suck at chess.... at least you’re better than me
same it sucks thats the reason I always blunder
I have aphantasia too. You don't have to literally visualize the position to make these calculations, though I'm sure it helps.
@@alex2005z aphantasia is when you cannot visualize in your head. Lets say you imagine an apple in your head. A person with aphantasia cant do that.
@@alex2005z it means an inability to visualize, having no mental imagery.
4:20 levi dropping the answer to the puzzle lmao i love him so much
"Looking ahead in the future, changing the position in your mind and deciding whether to make a move or not"
I have aphantasia. I don't like this game.
If I could link pictures I'd tell you but basically not having a visual imagination
I have Aphantasia too. I am 2000 in chess.com. There is hope.
@@peanutbutterconnoisseur4157 IS THE MESSIAH!
Getting lessons from an IM. Felt heart touched. Thank you so much Levi for helping us folks with no money to hire an IM. Appreciate it so much.
I’m a musician, it’s very hard for me to remember that there is a h. Am I the only one?😂
You ain't alone lol
fuckin. same.
No in Germany the b is actually named h and the b flat is named b😂
@@maru8703 even more messed up, what is the reason?
lol same
i like this dude. speaks well and tries to give both chess ranked players and novices at least something to chew on and or acknowledge.
I think you forgot to put time stamps in the description, I only see "Intro 0:00". But it's a great video!! Thanks for all the content you've been releasing lately, it's great
Now it's fixed
One of my favourite videos so far, feel like there aren’t many of this type of video on UA-cam
I’m a simple man i see levy posted so i click
Such an essential skill in chess, but somehow barely anyone talks about it and one just finds very little content about it. Thank you for the very instructive and entertaining video.
14:20 which square does white protect the most , i had the right one at first but thought d1 was more protected :(
c1 and d1 are more protected but I guess he meant more relevant squares.
He asked which of the squares in the _centre of the board_ does black control the most.
8:00
This just reminded me of the "Oh so you like X? Name every Y" meme.
"Oh, so you're an advanced chess player? Name every square your pieces are on."
As a person with aphantasia, this is a lot harder than it seems...
What is that
@@sameerplaynicals8790 can't see images inside my head
@@giannisr.7733 Oh i wonder what that would be like
It's indeed a lot harder, but I can sort off trace lines with my eyes - it's just a lot to keep track of, because I have to remember which pieces will be gone..
Good video, Levy. I've been doing puzzles and studying coordinates, but talking through the process of visualizing was very helpful.
I’m an intermediate player, and this video still helped a lot
This is more of a novice chess lesson, but I like his examples.
For at least 30 years I have known by heart the chess notation of each square, from either side. Visualizing where a knight can go in 3 moves is not too difficult.
There is a knight move visualization exercise that I have given to my students:
Put black pawns on c6, f6, c3, and f3. Put a white knight on a1. Only the white knight moves. The rule is that the knight cannot land on the black pawns, nor can it land on the capture squares of the black pawn. Then the goal is to get from a1 to b1. There is one way to do it in 3 moves: Na1-c2-a3-b1. The next goal is to go from b1 to c1: Much trickier. Nb1-a3-c2-d4-b3-c1. Then proceed to squares d1, e1, f1, g1, had h1. From there the next squares are h2, f2, c2, and a2 skipping over the forbidden squares. Then it is a3 to h3, and after that h4 to a4 until you have done the entire board. This is an exercise that many people find quite difficult. With practice, I can do the entire board in 3 minutes, but I might be a little rusty right now. Whereas many people find the knight a difficult piece to visualize, doing this exercise has made the knight my favorite piece.
His videos are more informative than my school lol
This is wonderful, I really appreciated this kind of content, it's much easier practising this way than doing it alone. And it's waaay more enjoyable, thank you very much, I'll consider this as a Christmas present!
Last time I was this early we were playing the Christmas Gambit!
Levy, man, you are a life saver. I needed this video so bad. Have a Happy Christmas man, thanks for the awesome content you've been sharing this year.
4:01 that moment when the queen actually has less controlled squares due to the bishop blocking the sight.
Rook: am I a joke to you?
I'm new to chess and have trouble visualizing. Thank you for these tools to help me train my mind to see things on the board.
What about c1 protected by 4 of white's pieces?
True but he said a square in the center only
i would love a book of puzzles specifically helping with blind fold chess. i,ve played chess for years and was practising the coordinates and also square colours and was surprised to see d5 was white i thought it was a dark square after thousands of games i should know what colour each square is and also know the co ordinates immediately so tnx for this video levy . i think i will learn the sqaures and practise blinfold until i can play with all the pieces its a good skill to have and it will help dramatically with normal chess
1:30 How in the hell is white's perspective the wonky one?!
Thanks Levy, this really helps me in a way that I didn't even know you could be helped.
Merry Christmas chessers.
But isn't c3 equally well protected in example 3?
You would be right but at 13:53 he specifies that he's talking about in the center of the board.
@@Zdeno8525 A control doesn't mean that it's protected, it means that if any thing happens on that square thay have alot of things to do about it .
The best visualization i have for nights is you can make a check-mark or an N in 3 moves with a knight. This is a really good set up to show the complete pathways of a knight. It shows more than them just weaving back and forth. Another good pattern is putting the queen on e4 instead of f5. its another 3 move combo that kind of looks like a snake coiling up.
Two comments - if you are a little stronger and don't need the first section to learn algebraic notation/have done similar exercises, try noting down the piece positions and doing it blindfold for an extra challenge. Second comment is feedback for Levy - I think for the game examples, it could be very instructive to not draw colors or arrows, and instead describe only by notation. This would force viewers to see more in their heads and could be better to prepare for OTB chess calculation since it's more similar. I remember being forced by my coach to sit on my hands and not touch the pieces, and he would describe the variations to me for game analysis.
But then beginners would be like "This is chinese to me... this goes too fast... he's losing me" and they'll just leave to other content. I know that's what I'd do...
You have an extraordinary gift for teaching. Besides the obvious experience, which many have, you entertain as well, and humor opens many doors of perception.