Nice! I have a few more 1.) Attack in the direction of your pawn chain. That's where you have space. Especially bishops are restricted in the opposite direction. 2.) The fewer pawn islands the better. A long pawn chain only has one base, while 3 short pawn chains have 3 bases that can be targeted. 3.) Horses need stable squares. A knight is the only piece where if it is forced to move, it cannot defend any of the same squares it was defending before, while a bishop or rook can move along the diagonal/file. 4.) Loose pieces drop off. Most tactics involve a fork. Defend your pieces before they're attacked so captures become trades.
Remember that all of these tips have exceptions. On of the biggest weaknesses of lower level players is that they play un-dynamically. If you rigidly stick to a tip like ”never have doubled pawns”, you can rarely improve. If you play correctly, it is often the best continuation to get an isolated, backwards, or doubled pawns, not castling, bishops for knights, etc.
@@fudgenugget8875 I know, and I'm not commenting on the video itself, but more so on the fact that people fail to make it past intermediate level because they stick rigidly to principles and play without dynamism.
I've only just started watching these videos and I have to say that I enjoy this style a lot more, with less memes. It's less distracting and more useful. Thank you
"Dont move the same piece twice in the opening" Doesnt apply to Ruy Lopez opening where you need to retreat or capture with the b5 Bishop when attacked with a6.
1. Learn when to keep the tension 2. If you can capture with a pawn to open up the path of development for a bishop, often this can supercede the capture toward the center rule. 3. If you are under 2000, avoid everything sicillian except the dragon (and a couple others) and the Grunfeld. 4. If you are being attacked on a side, strike back in the center 5. Most of the time, retreating knight moves are the wrong move, and if theyre right, theyll be the hardest to spot. 6. Contest enemy rooks on open files when you can. 7. If the oponent has a fianchetto bishop, try to blunt the long diagonal with pawns, or even better, strand one of their pawns in the way. 8. ASK WHAT YOUR OPONENT WANTS
In the late game, rook and a pawn is potentially a queen and a rook, which means they are more valuable than 6 points worth of lesser pieces, even though they both have the same value. In this situation, pawn is the most important piece which must be protected. If needed, by sacrificing the rook, and then leading the last pawn to the queen by protecting with a king.
It really depends on the minors and position, a bishop is really worth like 3.1-3.2 pawns and having the bishop pair when your opponent doesn't is worth a bit less than one pawn on an open board. The rook pair is also worth a similar bonus and the value of a pawn can be huge or worthless depending on if it is passed or doubled and how many times it has moved. Honestly the material system is just not very useful beyond a few basic lessons it teaches.
This is a helpful video but pleaseeee just get a microphone or something text to speech voices make for the worst sounding, most brainrot feeling content. Even if your voice sounds weird the content will be 300% more appealing
It's really obvious when I move the queen too early, after that, queen h5, pawn g6, queen takes pawn e5 check, block either the bishop, queen, or knight to e7, then queen takes rook to h8
If you have a more developed position, it's okay to take a pawn on the opening with your queen if the opponents only move is to move one of its existing pieces to threaten it the queen and cant fork. You can just slink away to near or on its starting square with a net neutral tempo and up a pawn TL:DR sometimes you can break rules if it makes your opponent break a rule as well.
i always breaks 2nd tip because i use a skirmish tactic in the beginning I was struggling at 400 and 500s before using it now I can confirm that I'm improving
_It's just the Ome wa mo shinderu of the pawns_ *Don't underestimate the swift blade that you won't notice they will have swung if you dare to dodge them at the start*
6:21 Rd3 the only option for white are spamming evitative; If he does 2 moves out of the king to promote, he's going to be checkmated; Whatever he does, he's cooked
Knights are much more effective in the opening than bishops because of the ability to hop over all the pieces that are on the board. Bishops, on the other hand, are more effective, in the end game, when there's a lot more space. I've always considered knights to be defensive pieces and bishops to be offensive pieces.
Not moving the same piece multiple times in the opening is kind of questionable since I've had great success with the alekhine defense for over a decade and the very principal of the alekhine is moving the same knight more than once
Nice! I have a few more
1.) Attack in the direction of your pawn chain. That's where you have space. Especially bishops are restricted in the opposite direction.
2.) The fewer pawn islands the better. A long pawn chain only has one base, while 3 short pawn chains have 3 bases that can be targeted.
3.) Horses need stable squares. A knight is the only piece where if it is forced to move, it cannot defend any of the same squares it was defending before, while a bishop or rook can move along the diagonal/file.
4.) Loose pieces drop off. Most tactics involve a fork. Defend your pieces before they're attacked so captures become trades.
Of course horses need stables! 🙂
Corollary to 3: take control of outposts (any relevant square where an opponent's pawn can't attack), preferably with knights
I finally beat martin
@@Mrbeahz1 hahahahahahahahahahahah
@@biggestoof huh?
As a pawn I agree with en passant is an order than a choice
Buld told me everything i learned in 1 year in just 10minutes
And when I was new to chess my newbie brain was like "wow so cool i have 4 pawns in 1 file"
@@sarahjayasinghe lmaooo
not bragging but I learned chess in like 1 day
@@Khafist Not bragging but I learned and memorised how the pieces moved in one 20 minutes game of chess
@@angeloaliazas2894not to brag but it quite literally took me 5 minutes to understand the movements of the chess pieces and remember them correctly
"Have fun and bad luck" bro said 💀
the subtle yet persistent jabs at haruki murakami throughout this vid is unreal 😭
Even at Magnum Calrissian
Fr bro, the game of cheese is just crazy
Why is he jabbing all these general managers
@@Gonna-Cry He even dared to go after Lever Rosemen
I was very surprised to have missed references towards one of my fav authors only to find that its a deliberate mispronunciation
Not only this is helpful but very entertaining
140th Liker
not rlly, it hurt to see all the cringe
Bro explained one year of played chess in a 9:41 long video
I thought you were a woman
I only learn this in 24 days since I have started playing chess this 3rd of September 😂
8:27 My man was COLD with that line, holy smokes
fr
Remember that all of these tips have exceptions. On of the biggest weaknesses of lower level players is that they play un-dynamically. If you rigidly stick to a tip like ”never have doubled pawns”, you can rarely improve. If you play correctly, it is often the best continuation to get an isolated, backwards, or doubled pawns, not castling, bishops for knights, etc.
Except for always doing the almighty en passant. That one can't have any exceptions.
@@Hypenord ah of course! That one is an obligation, even if you instantly lose!!
You can be too obsessed of anything in life, this is how opponents beat you even if they're losing. Resistance of temptation is important
His last tip was "know when to ignore principles" if you watched the whole video.
@@fudgenugget8875 I know, and I'm not commenting on the video itself, but more so on the fact that people fail to make it past intermediate level because they stick rigidly to principles and play without dynamism.
I've only just started watching these videos and I have to say that I enjoy this style a lot more, with less memes. It's less distracting and more useful. Thank you
the memes are the best part 🤣
This one had less memes? I'd hate to see the old content then.
DUDE I HAD 4 PAWNS IN1 FILE💀💀💀
Edit:YALL CHILL 1K LIKES IS ENOUGH
Both you and your opponent are stupid
try 7 now
@@backdoorguy1it’s not possible because you can’t have pawns in the back rank. 6 is most
bro has the Great Wall of Uselessness
What bro have done🤨
0:41 insane 💀
2:10 just Castle early so you get checkmated like magnus
I am supposed to castle early or not. Was that just sarcasm.
@@pitlesskart it depends the opening.
Shirt gambit
3:31ooo whu- famous last words
He sacrificed the game for the legacy🗿
Bobby is a chad for doing en passant
8:24 no hikaru was harmed here.
3:18 today I blundered my queen just to en passant lol😂😂😂
You rapidly become one of my favourite youtubers with the information and humour, keep it up.
"Dont move the same piece twice in the opening"
Doesnt apply to Ruy Lopez opening where you need to retreat or capture with the b5 Bishop when attacked with a6.
keyword “tip” not rule
Bro casually dropped peak chess content
yeah you will have more chances to win games than chances to perform a classy EN PASSANT. cherish those moments, don’t let them go to waste!
1. Learn when to keep the tension
2. If you can capture with a pawn to open up the path of development for a bishop, often this can supercede the capture toward the center rule.
3. If you are under 2000, avoid everything sicillian except the dragon (and a couple others) and the Grunfeld.
4. If you are being attacked on a side, strike back in the center
5. Most of the time, retreating knight moves are the wrong move, and if theyre right, theyll be the hardest to spot.
6. Contest enemy rooks on open files when you can.
7. If the oponent has a fianchetto bishop, try to blunt the long diagonal with pawns, or even better, strand one of their pawns in the way.
8. ASK WHAT YOUR OPONENT WANTS
In the late game, rook and a pawn is potentially a queen and a rook, which means they are more valuable than 6 points worth of lesser pieces, even though they both have the same value. In this situation, pawn is the most important piece which must be protected. If needed, by sacrificing the rook, and then leading the last pawn to the queen by protecting with a king.
It really depends on the minors and position, a bishop is really worth like 3.1-3.2 pawns and having the bishop pair when your opponent doesn't is worth a bit less than one pawn on an open board. The rook pair is also worth a similar bonus and the value of a pawn can be huge or worthless depending on if it is passed or doubled and how many times it has moved. Honestly the material system is just not very useful beyond a few basic lessons it teaches.
Finally, I’ve been looking for a video just like this for so long. I don’t enjoy the robotic voice over but I’m appreciative nonetheless
This is a helpful video but pleaseeee just get a microphone or something text to speech voices make for the worst sounding, most brainrot feeling content. Even if your voice sounds weird the content will be 300% more appealing
these videos would suck without the voices
We dont want to listen to a nerd we want robot
Thats just like your opinion man
This video is absolutely gold. Not only super helpful tips, but hilarious as well. “And with that, he sacrificed…the game”
3:31 he sacrificed the game🗿🗿
LOLL
Me watching it over and over again until I remember it😂
Pawns- Scouts with SMGs
Knight- Shotgunners
Bishop- Snipers
Rook-Assault Rifles
Queen- Light Machine Gunner
King- Heavily Armored tank contains the President
Every openings/defenses when
Honestly I just want to know more than just “move king/queen’s pawn first” opening
I have a chess tournament tomorow this is so useful tnx!
8:30 great example 😂😂😂😂😂😂
This might be the best video on chess I've ever seen. Great work! 👍
I triple pawn. I plan on winning through sheer audacity.
3:34 not bobby getting checkmate😭-
2:07 “don’t try that at home” ok fine I will do it at my friends house
4:37 😂😂 always happens with me
It's really obvious when I move the queen too early, after that, queen h5, pawn g6, queen takes pawn e5 check, block either the bishop, queen, or knight to e7, then queen takes rook to h8
Buddy explained 1 year of chess knowledge in just 10 minutes
Throwing shade on hikaru on looking for a better move to be like magnus is WILD.
Must tip are too perfect for normally mid ladder, casual game more wild than anything yu could imagine
1:58 wtf is his king doing all the way over there
He was forsed to go there by the couple of checks
0:25 got an instant sub from me LOLLL
Exalent explanation Thank you❤🎉🎉
"Don't develop queen early"
That one chess bot: *No*
I subbed like twenty seconds into this. This is amazing lol
If you have a more developed position, it's okay to take a pawn on the opening with your queen if the opponents only move is to move one of its existing pieces to threaten it the queen and cant fork. You can just slink away to near or on its starting square with a net neutral tempo and up a pawn
TL:DR sometimes you can break rules if it makes your opponent break a rule as well.
6:27 Guess what though: 2 connected pawns on 6th rank DOESNT BEAT A BISHOP!
Just castle early and got checkmated like magnus :)
sus profile pic
i always breaks 2nd tip
because i use a skirmish tactic in the beginning
I was struggling at 400 and 500s before using it
now I can confirm that I'm improving
2:13 magnus 😂😂😂😂😂
I just started a month and a half ago and These tips got me from 600 to 700 mr in an hour
8:24 I actually didn't think about it.
Usually when i find a good move i just play it.
But this video really helped me out on chess, thanks!
9:00 bro think he's hikaru 😂 checkmate is hanging
This is such a good, funny, entertaining and educational video
what a great video and what a great way to show it in an entertaining none boring format
Extra Tip On The 2nd Tip
You can Move the Same Piece twice In opening If It's Under Attack Execpt Pawns I guess
Awesome video and incredible animations
I love how these videos dont take this too seriously and add a bit of comedy, and I think it's hilarious how bro kept dogging on en passant
THIS IS fucking fucking fucking good and fucking great
“Me about to checkmate my opponent”
The bishop coming from the ends of the hell:
0:32 Bro i liked the poem and all until it said "Chatgptme"
Whenever i castle my classmates does a checkmate threat that i dont see until now
At 9:00 black can just play checkmate
This was just a beautiful example of putting rooks in 2nd and 7th rank
Love the tips. Love the humor, thanks man
Great summary, thank you so much for compiling this!
After watching this, I feel like I am on a battlefield in medieval time.
3:18 en passant is literally the weirdest thing i have seen in chess
_It's just the Ome wa mo shinderu of the pawns_
*Don't underestimate the swift blade that you won't notice they will have swung if you dare to dodge them at the start*
Dont open the center but e4 is the best move
0:22 bro just gave me a miner depression 😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢
6:21 Rd3 the only option for white are spamming evitative; If he does 2 moves out of the king to promote, he's going to be checkmated; Whatever he does, he's cooked
04:20 i never play hope chess.
I always play hopeless chess.
Scandinavian Defense ignores no queen too early rule. And it's one of the strongest openings for black
Control as many squares as you can, you can develop a tactic from that
Love the memes and the end 😂
Thanks for this information, I'm going to a chess competition at others school tomorrow.
Real use full tips thanks bro
4:53 In this position Qe7 is a disaster due to Nd5
Knights are much more effective in the opening than bishops because of the ability to hop over all the pieces that are on the board. Bishops, on the other hand, are more effective, in the end game, when there's a lot more space. I've always considered knights to be defensive pieces and bishops to be offensive pieces.
Bobby being a king sacrificed the game🤣🤣😭😭
Thanks, i learned a lot from this video👍
Top 3 Strongest Chess Players:
1. Magnus Carlsen
2. Drunk Magnus
3. Late Magnus
you messed up the order bro… 1) late maguns 2) drunk magnus 3)magnus carlsen 😂
And The pawn moves ohhhhhhhh levi
Not moving the same piece multiple times in the opening is kind of questionable since I've had great success with the alekhine defense for over a decade and the very principal of the alekhine is moving the same knight more than once
this video is awesome. not sure what some guys have against the text to speech
2:14 - It is absurd
3:35 - I would checjmate
4:25 - Golden words
Bro one time I had 6 pawns lined up in a straight line 😂😂😂😂
Bro had to many swear words than tips💀
But tips are good
This very helpful and funny also😂
“And use your pieces to smash your opponent’s king“. Think about it.
The queen: 🔥
Don't play when you are exausted, high or drunk
unless u magnus
@@Vader4499 totally agree
"En passant before mate in 1" got it it's now noted
4:37 rook: I hope he doesn’t see me
*rook dies somehow*
*bishop acting like a sniper monke*
Wow amazing tips bro..❤
I literally did the move in the hope he doesn't see me. And didn't know the " what if he sees me line"
DUDE I MAKE THE MYTHIC 5 PAWNS💀
Bro the image that used in the video which i can say a "meme" is totally funny to me 😂❤ i already subscribe
3:29 That reaction😂
Have fun and bad luck caught me off guard
en passent got me cracking😅
2:11 Magnus had to stop himself from turning into the Hulk
Great advice, thank you.