“this GM is really taking his time with his move. maybe i have him stumped?” Daniel: “Okay let me spend some time explaining how much of a dumbass move this was”
I would put the knight d4 before taking the bishop, because the bishop is still hanging and the queen is attacked at the same time. But I guess the position transposes. However putting the knight on d4 first looks more juicy.
@Yuri Lopes to be fair, I've done my fair share of those... If I had a nickel for every time I analyse my own game and go "wtf?" when I see one of my moves...
@Yuri Lopes 100% agree. Had to be a misclick. Not putting it past a 1300 to commit a 1 move blunder, but so many of his moves were quite sensible and then this random queen move comes out of nowhere, accomplishes nothing and blunders a bishop. No way did he intend to make that move.
This is the type of content that beginners like seeing. Direct to the point. There are online content out there by other GMs that discusses really just a vague and outright boring manner including philosophies in life making it sound highfalutin and doesn't really attract the novice players at all.
On the other hand, this type of content is very easy to make and is super abundant. Any player 1200< knows everything he says. I am 1900 in rapid on lichess, and find there is a lack of amateur/ mid range information, that is memorably explained
Thank you so much for this. EXACTLY what I was looking for. Expert vs beginner. Most videos that teach chess moves and openings, etc usually do so expecting the predictable moves of other experts. But what about when you don't play an expert, so the moves are very unpredictable. Better to know HOW to think about the game rather than moves. This was perfect. Thank you sir.
He explains his opponents mistakes very humbly and kindly, not arrogant or insulting in anyway. He also makes it simple and straightforward enough for lower levels to understand. Very glad to have found this channel!
I mean, would you mock a 3rd-grade student for adding 9 to 12 to 19 instead of 21? Probably not, that's how Daniel's chess skills are compared to that guy.
Every time I see Daniel's name now I just hear it in my head like Charlie right after delivering the checkmate to xQc. "DANIEL NARODITSKY IS FUCKING PROPHET"
@@student6292 i played the piano for at least 300+ times, I probably have seen different positions after move 15 at least 20 each times. And I am a 1300, granted that I have been hardstuck on this rating after close to 700 games lol!
@@jordanlimantara1814 i'm stuck at 1200 at lichess as well, is it only me or on chess.com is harder to gain rate ? cause on chess.com i'm like 900 flirting with 1000
That there are "beginners" who will win 100 out of 100 games against you. xD But dude, as a 1600, your average Master would do the same to me, and a gm would do the same to him, and Carlsen would do the same to a low level gm. There are simply many rungs on this ladder that are so wide you can't see above you. So start climbing, because it's fun.
During the last titled Tuesday, his connection cut out for a minute in a blitz/rapid (not rly sure could’ve been bullet too lol) game causing him to have 6 seconds left on clock vs 1 minute. He lost. Look up “WiFi Blunder” and it will pop up, a vid by chess.com. If you scroll through comments there’s timestamps, but I’m pretty sure it was at about 2:15:00 Edits were for grammar
@@MrCEO96 Hikaru is good but not for beginners. As an expert level player or higher when Hikaru makes a move or comments on a move we instantly get it. He doesn't go into basic principles and that's fine for more advanced players. He also blurts out sequences several moves deep which are, for the most part, easy to understand for advanced or titled players.
@@MrCEO96The thing with Gotham is that he limits his teaching by underestimating his audience. The majority of times he will tell us to not play complex openings because he only focuses on the noobs. He is cool when playing too but his repertoire is kinda limited I would say? But yeah my point that you can watch gotham only if you are a weak intermediate. After that a lot of Naroditsky and if you keep evolving watch hikaru
I find this so interesting, its like watching a fully planned out presentation but hes freestyling the whole thing. Its almost mechanical how he knows every move and the names of them and who came up with it and background information about the person who came up with the move. I can tell that so much time has gone into this and that this is true talent.
I have literally never seen a GM explain so articulately and accessibly the rationale behind each and every move. This is top notch content, thanks so much!
protomous the best players in chess history have never shown any mercy. But I have seen magnus lose to absolute nobody’s a couple of times online😂 but I’m sure Michel Jordan and Tom brady have been out played but they are still the best in there sports history (if you think garry is better than magnus I respect your opinion) but no one else is valid
@@slllyy4985 well you don't even know if those best players are also ever get defeated by a lesser known players. Magnus showed his game so if he's defeated by random people, everyone can know. but in the past, not so much as now
The reality is that the beginner didn't play badly at all. He made some minor errors that probably would be OK against most players. It just so happens he was playing a GM.
He did play bad though, blundered his bishop early in the game and a couple moves after around 9:16 he blundered his queen but Daniel didn’t see it probably because he’s explaining a lot of things as he plays
@@adamv9892 I think he saw it just fine but he had already check mate ideas on his head. If you take the queen with a knight you cant get that fast check mate after. Then again im not an expert and might have missed something important.
Dear Daniel, this was a great lesson indeed. It is very seldom applied by GM to explain their mooves in their games. This was a great lesson. I wish you much success in your further path and stay healthy. Best regards from Germany Tom
Dear thomas4328 This was so great complement for one of my favorite and also one of the best grandmaster of chess. I really appreciate your kind words for such a humble person who is also a world class chess player indeed. I also wish you much success and stay healthy and fit in the future. Best regards from Tom and Jerry Island Jerry signing off!
This was a great video. Simple, informative, and in-depth without belittling his opponent like so many chess masters tend to do in their gameplay videos. I really enjoyed watching. Hope to see more content in the future with tips for chess beginners.
Starting to take the dive beyond the basics and it's unbelievable we get this type of free lessons from a GM. Thank you, Daniel! I have been binge watching your videos and appreciate the content you put out.
In my opinion, one of the biggest leaps you can make with chess is when you build a habit of articulating your moves to yourself rather than just moving off intuition and experience. The better you can articulate your reasons for the move, the better you become because your level of understanding increases.
The first thing I did when I was trying to improve was google "chess master vs beginner" and this was super insightful. Thank you for introducing me to how hard chess can be.
I've recently started playing chess, and have been having a lot of fun with it. Seeing a GM playing against someone on my level and thoroughly explaining his thought process is very nice. Thank you, Daniel. You're very well spoken and I'll definitely keep watching this series.
@@nicholasward8358 Right? Art of GUITAR talking about martial arts on a chess video. The bonkers thing is, no one expected this kind of nonsense when they were speculating about what the 21st century would be like. Isn't this a great time to live in?
Finally a GM explaining chess in a way we can all understand and not showing off by destroying weak opponents and showing off without really teaching anything. This was great
I've been trying to figure out how to develop a good middle game and this was so helpful! So many videos fail to outline the strategy behind piece placement without going into super highbrow concepts that confuse beginners. Thank you for this!
I’m just getting into chess again after a trying a couple years ago. Videos like this that explain the moves as you go really open up the concepts to beginners so that we can understand as well. Beautiful presentation and video. Thank you!
Explaining the thought process behind decision making is extremely helpful. I was trying to watch GMHikaru, but when I watched him layout 14 arrows in 30 seconds I kinda realized he's probably not the guy for me. The real icing on the cake was watching Hikaru in slow mow and still not getting it LOL! That was when I really knew.
I’m a new player and please keep doing these videos they help me out on seeing the opponents mistakes much videos don’t explain how to do this well and I love how you play out different scenarios that may happen in a real match.. good content! 👍
I think that this is a genius idea that could really be a smart idea to bring to streaming where you really explain things rather than saying fast coordinates that begginers to intermediate players don't usually understand. I think Danya would be a great candidate for this type of stream. 😁
This is awesome! I have never really gotten into chess before, as there was always so many different strategies and ways to play, and I always played more physical sports in HS and College. It was extremely helpful to have you explain each of the moves and the importance of each decision.
This was amazingly useful. You're very articulate Daniel and it really helps while you're explaining the theory and reasoning behind your moves. I've only been learning for a month or so but I'm struggling to break 1000. The info about the pin on the queen with the bishop was exactly contradictory to how I'd been playing : I'd been looking at the queen as a way to retake the bsihop if he took the knight, so as not to break my pawn structure. I would always have left the pin. I'll be watching more of your videos. Thanks for making them !
Awesome to see a grandmaster explain the basics. I'm a 1400 player and learned from this video. Thank you, and please keep them coming. You've got a new subscriber.
I always start by considering what moves my opponent would want to play if he had another turn. And then, I usually imagine I get two turns and I try to find a crushing plan. It works well for me. The way you look at something will change your perception of the thing you're looking at.
This came up in my recommendation and I definitely subscribed. Such a helpful video for absolute beginners! I’m new to all this and it was explained so clearly and very digestible too.
easily my favorite chess streamer. thank you for being active. You're concise and frankly, brilliant. I really appreciate your content. You make chess seem simpler and you're even helping with my chess anxiety. Thank you thank you thank you.
This was a fantastic summary/explanation. I'm just getting back into chess after around 12 years away from the game, back when I was Class A/Expert (around 1950/2000) and this video sparked a whole bunch of memories and lessons learned back then. You've definitely earned a new subscriber, going to be watching many more of your videos!
Man Daniel you’re unreal, I’m rated 700ish blunder under pressure knowing I am playing a 10 minute game. Yet you’re calmly explaining so throughly and well every single move and winning in 2.5min I really appreciate your content thank you so much
I am an old guy (50 years old) just starting to play chess which is a daunting task to say the least. This is one of the best videos I have watched so far. Brought so much clarity to what to look for and was so well explained. Just subscribed to your channel @Daniel Naroditsky and looking forward to watching many more of your videos. Thanks!!
3:40 development 4:38 Bishops (Long diagonal) countermove = profalaxis 6:28 Beginner quick move take 7:42 better you are at chess = violating norms 8:25 FIRST thought after they move 9:07 transformations and Fallout, opening king 9:55 whether you can take a pawn 10:33 a Fork 11:13 look for more 12:43 undefended pieces 15:50 beginners and unexpected moves 17:01 CHECKMATE Look out for safety of King - Thank you so much, this is so helpful to my game. Going to take this all on board and focus more on DEVELOPMENT and less on Piece Acquisitions!
Daniel Naroditsky: Chess Grandmaster. Also Daniel Naroditsky: I've certainly lost a lot of games by knocking out the connection to the router with my feet. (06:00)
@@rathelmmc3194 Wrong. No legitimate 1200 would leave their bishop en pris in that manner (especially in longer time controls). That guy was either extremely nervous about playing a GM, or he had his rating boosted. But trust me, you do not miss such obvious one move tactics if you actually perform at a 1200 level.
When I play chess, I beat everybody, until I met somebody who was actually good at chess. I've been actually putting in effort to get better, and this is an amazing help to watch. Thank you.
Great video. Thanks a lot, Daniel. Really clear and straightforward. I'm going to try and learn better chess to teach my son. He's only four, so for now, I still have the edge :-)
My 14 year old son played you a few years ago(2016) in Hollywood at El Capitan at the movie preview of The Queen of Katwe. My son( 10 years old at the time) played you for 14 minutes. I have the video. My son taught himself to play chess. You were very polite and courteous to us. Thank you!
Just found your channel after wanting to learn how to play chess again (haven't played since 5th grade). Please, please, please keep making beginner content like this - I learned SO much. Thank you!
Damn I've just discovered your videos, really nice how you explain everything including the basics. I'm already a little more advanced (1800-2000 on Lichess), however a lot of times I still do dumb mistakes and I never knew how to fix those. This is for sure gonna boost me...thanks a lot!!
sir you just earned yourself a follower. that was brilliant and just taught me so much. This format is probably the most educational way to learn chess besides chess puzzles.
Thanks very much. I’m really happy to have stumbled upon your UA-cam channel. Please post more such videos aimed at low rated players struggling to get ahead.
No, the part of the brain that detects threats failed. Not his/her entire brain.. It happens, sometimes you play fast and not pay enough attention and blunder a piece..
A reading from the book of Naroditsky: And so the Prophet, thy lord, spake upon his flock, “learn from my fallen foe’s mistakes ye mighty, and thou shalt prosper in thine hall”. And his flock rejoiced, for many hath not known of a solid defense for the Ruy Lopez opening. After by the Prophet’s will, after time and dedication put in by his flock, they too found their ranks engorged. Amen.
“this GM is really taking his time with his move. maybe i have him stumped?”
Daniel: “Okay let me spend some time explaining how much of a dumbass move this was”
Funnily enough, I think that if GMs take their time before moving, they give more time for the opponent to think and the game quality increases.
Honestly I would be honored if a GM used my bad chess as a teaching method.
I would put the knight d4 before taking the bishop, because the bishop is still hanging and the queen is attacked at the same time. But I guess the position transposes. However putting the knight on d4 first looks more juicy.
Hahahahahahah
@@jonathanamwoza2157 And here we see the classical Amwoza blunder
"My opponent plays a bit of an enigmatic move" was a very respectful way of saying what you were trying to say.
Yeah, definitely added that phrase to my daily Lexicon lol
LOL
enigmatic move aka "lol this dude just fucking blundered"
@Yuri Lopes to be fair, I've done my fair share of those... If I had a nickel for every time I analyse my own game and go "wtf?" when I see one of my moves...
@Yuri Lopes 100% agree. Had to be a misclick. Not putting it past a 1300 to commit a 1 move blunder, but so many of his moves were quite sensible and then this random queen move comes out of nowhere, accomplishes nothing and blunders a bishop. No way did he intend to make that move.
He makes it look so easy.. i watched this and confidently opened lichess to lose 4 games in a row.
Right? A person who’s truly passionate and good at something always makes it look like a breeze it’s amazing
Hahaha relatable
LMAO. IM JUST ABOUT TO DO THE SAME
😂😂😂Loved this comment man!
every time, buddy
“And now I will begin delivering a series of devastating blows.”
Harsh.
Loved your videos. Keep up the good work
I LOL'd
... But true!
YES
Sounds like something a character in one punch man would say
yayyy a chess game lower level enough I can understand! Nice vid Daniel.
hi
Portrait art fan here. I love your channel
I have recently been getting into chess and let me say, you had made more sense in one video than every other chess you tuber I’ve watched so far.
higher level* the higher you go, the more you can see.
Factsss. Im here to get better also lol
this is why my rating is so low.. I keep getting matched up with GM's
Nonono, it's because your teammates are terrible, of course!
Ugh, my pawns are so awful at this game. I tell them to checkmate and they end up just getting themselves killed!
@@omnipresentsnowflake4698 woah man my pawns are rigged too ):
Omni Present SnowFlake mine seem to be doing fine maybe you can call the company you bought them from to get them looked at
Inting pawns. Thats a good username idea hahaha
This is the type of content that beginners like seeing. Direct to the point. There are online content out there by other GMs that discusses really just a vague and outright boring manner including philosophies in life making it sound highfalutin and doesn't really attract the novice players at all.
Which video(s) did you see GM life philosophies? I’m interested lol
On the other hand, this type of content is very easy to make and is super abundant. Any player 1200< knows everything he says. I am 1900 in rapid on lichess, and find there is a lack of amateur/ mid range information, that is memorably explained
julien astier chess dojo is great. IM Kostya is great.
julien astier ooh and forgive me for not mentioning hanging pawns. A freakin beast of a channel
@@jackismname really? I thought there were a lot of material out there
Thank you so much for this. EXACTLY what I was looking for. Expert vs beginner. Most videos that teach chess moves and openings, etc usually do so expecting the predictable moves of other experts. But what about when you don't play an expert, so the moves are very unpredictable. Better to know HOW to think about the game rather than moves. This was perfect. Thank you sir.
Exactly !
Same here!! This is just INCREDIBLY educational for us newbs!!
He explains his opponents mistakes very humbly and kindly, not arrogant or insulting in anyway. He also makes it simple and straightforward enough for lower levels to understand. Very glad to have found this channel!
I mean, would you mock a 3rd-grade student for adding 9 to 12 to 19 instead of 21? Probably not, that's how Daniel's chess skills are compared to that guy.
Levy squeezing in the back
@@asdfasdf-mn8iu 3rd grade is too late in early years to do shit as stupid as that but I see what you’re saying
@@Extreme11 maybe the 3rd grader in question is an american
any way*
UA-cam algorithm just knowing that I binged the entire season of queens gambit -_-
How good is it
@@w.8424 excellent
same
yeah lol xD
watch Pawn Sacrifice decent movie
Daniel "Daniel Naroditsky" Naroditsky
Daniel ‘The Wise Prophet’ Noroditsky
Good one
Every time I see Daniel's name now I just hear it in my head like Charlie right after delivering the checkmate to xQc.
"DANIEL NARODITSKY IS FUCKING PROPHET"
s w a g ù what I love is how hard Charlie exaggerated his last game
Revolver "Revolver Ocelot" Ocelot (Revolver Ocelot)
Ok this is actually super helpful and instructive
Bruh imagine you’re just looking for some chess games to play and Boom, a wild grandmaster has appeared!
And it's such a mainline theory too lol!
Attack with Stockfish! Super Effective!!!
@@jordanlimantara1814 to be fair i think 1200s have a slight understanding of some mainline theory but it probably only goes as far as under 10 moves
@@student6292 i played the piano for at least 300+ times, I probably have seen different positions after move 15 at least 20 each times. And I am a 1300, granted that I have been hardstuck on this rating after close to 700 games lol!
@@jordanlimantara1814 i'm stuck at 1200 at lichess as well, is it only me or on chess.com is harder to gain rate ? cause on chess.com i'm like 900 flirting with 1000
This was like 10 y/o kid vs. Mike Tyson with a microphone explaining how hard and where he's going to punch next.
I YELLED you're exactly right
True
😂
"So now I'm gonna crush his head with my elbow. He may die but at least I win this round."
Proceeds to kill the kid
That there are "beginners" who will win 100 out of 100 games against you. xD
But dude, as a 1600, your average Master would do the same to me, and a gm would do the same to him, and Carlsen would do the same to a low level gm.
There are simply many rungs on this ladder that are so wide you can't see above you.
So start climbing, because it's fun.
For me, you are probably the most educational chess streamer. Thank you for your content.
16:02 "That mechanism in his brain that is responsible for detecting threats.. that might have failed." I laughed at this xD
5:55 "Its important to have a stable internet connection" - GM Daniel Naroditsky, 2020
Well he’s not wrong
That didn’t age well
@@colt9758 can you explain?
During the last titled Tuesday, his connection cut out for a minute in a blitz/rapid (not rly sure could’ve been bullet too lol) game causing him to have 6 seconds left on clock vs 1 minute. He lost. Look up “WiFi Blunder” and it will pop up, a vid by chess.com. If you scroll through comments there’s timestamps, but I’m pretty sure it was at about 2:15:00
Edits were for grammar
@@colt9758 nice lmo
You've become my favorite gm to watch because you are one of the greatest gms but more importantly one of the greatest teachers
By far. I stopped watching Hikaru because he’s not very good at teaching. Gotham and Daniel are the best imo
@@MrCEO96 isn't Gotham an IM ?
Tom Atans yeah, he is
@@MrCEO96 Hikaru is good but not for beginners. As an expert level player or higher when Hikaru makes a move or comments on a move we instantly get it. He doesn't go into basic principles and that's fine for more advanced players. He also blurts out sequences several moves deep which are, for the most part, easy to understand for advanced or titled players.
@@MrCEO96The thing with Gotham is that he limits his teaching by underestimating his audience. The majority of times he will tell us to not play complex openings because he only focuses on the noobs. He is cool when playing too but his repertoire is kinda limited I would say? But yeah my point that you can watch gotham only if you are a weak intermediate. After that a lot of Naroditsky and if you keep evolving watch hikaru
I find this so interesting, its like watching a fully planned out presentation but hes freestyling the whole thing. Its almost mechanical how he knows every move and the names of them and who came up with it and background information about the person who came up with the move. I can tell that so much time has gone into this and that this is true talent.
I have literally never seen a GM explain so articulately and accessibly the rationale behind each and every move. This is top notch content, thanks so much!
I love that chess is a game where you can say, "several centuries ago someone discovered..."
"several centuries ago someone did what we now call "smash" in badminton"
Truly from the Russian school of teaching chess, no mercy
It’s honestly a very good teaching style, as long as the student can keep their cool and learn from their mistakes
protomous the best players in chess history have never shown any mercy. But I have seen magnus lose to absolute nobody’s a couple of times online😂 but I’m sure Michel Jordan and Tom brady have been out played but they are still the best in there sports history (if you think garry is better than magnus I respect your opinion) but no one else is valid
@@slllyy4985 well you don't even know if those best players are also ever get defeated by a lesser known players. Magnus showed his game so if he's defeated by random people, everyone can know. but in the past, not so much as now
what is daniel's ethnicity? was his first language slavic? sometimes it sounds like he's got a bit of an eastern european accent
@@lerrygindgren2076 I don't know the specifics, but I know he can speak Russian. He does Russian only streams now and then.
Thank you Daniel, we appreciate you for this
The opponent was rated in the 1200s, and he calls him a beginner. What does that mean for the rest of us amoebas and pond scum that are below 800?
Someday we'll evolve lol
I only know the basic rules, and routinely lose to my 10 year old brother. ( I'm 20)
You begin at 1200 so someone at less began a few games ago
@@johnmalcolm4822 ... and then worked their way back to 1200 by winning a _lot_ of games to get back up from 700 or 800...
😂😂😂
I actually won on a game of chess with my dad for the first time after watching your video! Thank you so much!
he let you win
@@fraser2636 LMAO
u smol :)
So you Dad sucks at chess. Good job.
@@Mistanyycguy no he was drunk :)
The reality is that the beginner didn't play badly at all. He made some minor errors that probably would be OK against most players. It just so happens he was playing a GM.
He did play bad though, blundered his bishop early in the game and a couple moves after around 9:16 he blundered his queen but Daniel didn’t see it probably because he’s explaining a lot of things as he plays
Lmao at 11:30 he explains why he didn’t initially take the queen, shows the difference between a GM and myself 😂
@@adamv9892 when his opponent played Nxf6 it came with check, so no, he never had the chance to take the queen there
@@MrNutburger damn you’re right I completely missed that 🤦🏻♂️😂
@@adamv9892 I think he saw it just fine but he had already check mate ideas on his head. If you take the queen with a knight you cant get that fast check mate after.
Then again im not an expert and might have missed something important.
This could become one of the greatest chess channels out there
It kinda already is. Daniel explains things very clearly.
@@AUG_Glow
But gotham chess is more popular. Daniel is better.
@@AyubHassan07 irrelevant
17:20 Thank you Niyoyu for being a punching bag.
Dear Daniel,
this was a great lesson indeed. It is very seldom applied by GM to explain their mooves in their games. This was a great lesson. I wish you much success in your further path and stay healthy.
Best regards from Germany
Tom
Dear thomas4328
This was so great complement for one of my favorite and also one of the best grandmaster of chess. I really appreciate your kind words for such a humble person who is also a world class chess player indeed. I also wish you much success and stay healthy and fit in the future.
Best regards from Tom and Jerry Island
Jerry signing off!
This was a great video. Simple, informative, and in-depth without belittling his opponent like so many chess masters tend to do in their gameplay videos. I really enjoyed watching. Hope to see more content in the future with tips for chess beginners.
You're a terrific teacher. Thanks for continuing to put out interesting, instructive videos!
Look how they massacred my boy.
Perfect
Daniel Plainview !
So funny ! Ha
😂😂😂
He makes it look so easy.. i watched this and confidently opened lichess to lose 4 games in a row.
The connection loss wasn't an internet problem; Niyoyu's fight/flight reaction when he saw who he was playing was just to yank out his cable.
Starting to take the dive beyond the basics and it's unbelievable we get this type of free lessons from a GM. Thank you, Daniel! I have been binge watching your videos and appreciate the content you put out.
In my opinion, one of the biggest leaps you can make with chess is when you build a habit of articulating your moves to yourself rather than just moving off intuition and experience. The better you can articulate your reasons for the move, the better you become because your level of understanding increases.
My man is popping off with these BANGERS!!!
I have never played a game of chess in my life why am I watching this
You should play, as you can see the existence of Grandmasters, it has excellent replay value
Lmao same
same bro rofl
@@connermannie6223 chess is very fun
You want to learn how to play? I can add you on discord and teach you how to play
The first thing I did when I was trying to improve was google "chess master vs beginner" and this was super insightful. Thank you for introducing me to how hard chess can be.
I've recently started playing chess, and have been having a lot of fun with it. Seeing a GM playing against someone on my level and thoroughly explaining his thought process is very nice. Thank you, Daniel. You're very well spoken and I'll definitely keep watching this series.
This is great. I do Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and a lot of the same principles apply but just with the physical body.
Out of all the places to see you, a chess video is not what I would have expected lol
@@nicholasward8358 Right? Art of GUITAR talking about martial arts on a chess video.
The bonkers thing is, no one expected this kind of nonsense when they were speculating about what the 21st century would be like. Isn't this a great time to live in?
Love your vids
I do both BJJ and chess and am amazed at how similar they are.
Wrestling here!
So exciting Danya is doing this series :)
Finally a GM explaining chess in a way we can all understand and not showing off by destroying weak opponents and showing off without really teaching anything. This was great
Daniel did this to help us all get better. He spent his time, set up his tech, educated us... all for free. What a great human being...
I have been consistently watching videos from this channel for around five videos, and I must tell you that this channel is GOLD. Thanks, Danya.
I've been trying to figure out how to develop a good middle game and this was so helpful! So many videos fail to outline the strategy behind piece placement without going into super highbrow concepts that confuse beginners. Thank you for this!
I’m just getting into chess again after a trying a couple years ago. Videos like this that explain the moves as you go really open up the concepts to beginners so that we can understand as well. Beautiful presentation and video. Thank you!
Explaining the thought process behind decision making is extremely helpful. I was trying to watch GMHikaru, but when I watched him layout 14 arrows in 30 seconds I kinda realized he's probably not the guy for me. The real icing on the cake was watching Hikaru in slow mow and still not getting it LOL! That was when I really knew.
Thanks Daniel, you're really helping the chess boom and the newbies that are just getting into chess.
I’m a new player and please keep doing these videos they help me out on seeing the opponents mistakes much videos don’t explain how to do this well and I love how you play out different scenarios that may happen in a real match.. good content! 👍
I think that this is a genius idea that could really be a smart idea to bring to streaming where you really explain things rather than saying fast coordinates that begginers to intermediate players don't usually understand. I think Danya would be a great candidate for this type of stream. 😁
This is awesome! I have never really gotten into chess before, as there was always so many different strategies and ways to play, and I always played more physical sports in HS and College. It was extremely helpful to have you explain each of the moves and the importance of each decision.
This was amazingly useful. You're very articulate Daniel and it really helps while you're explaining the theory and reasoning behind your moves. I've only been learning for a month or so but I'm struggling to break 1000. The info about the pin on the queen with the bishop was exactly contradictory to how I'd been playing : I'd been looking at the queen as a way to retake the bsihop if he took the knight, so as not to break my pawn structure. I would always have left the pin. I'll be watching more of your videos. Thanks for making them !
Awesome to see a grandmaster explain the basics. I'm a 1400 player and learned from this video. Thank you, and please keep them coming. You've got a new subscriber.
I always start by considering what moves my opponent would want to play if he had another turn. And then, I usually imagine I get two turns and I try to find a crushing plan. It works well for me. The way you look at something will change your perception of the thing you're looking at.
This came up in my recommendation and I definitely subscribed. Such a helpful video for absolute beginners! I’m new to all this and it was explained so clearly and very digestible too.
How is your chess going now? :)
*“And I’m just going to say goodbye to that Bishop!”*
i came looking in the comments for someone to bring that up after i saw that lmao
The way he stared straight at the camera for that one was hilarious hahaha
easily my favorite chess streamer. thank you for being active. You're concise and frankly, brilliant. I really appreciate your content. You make chess seem simpler and you're even helping with my chess anxiety. Thank you thank you thank you.
This was a fantastic summary/explanation. I'm just getting back into chess after around 12 years away from the game, back when I was Class A/Expert (around 1950/2000) and this video sparked a whole bunch of memories and lessons learned back then. You've definitely earned a new subscriber, going to be watching many more of your videos!
Dani: *absolutely crushed his opponent*
Also Dani: “GG” 💀
No point making the guy feel worse 🤷😜🤣🤣
Man Daniel you’re unreal, I’m rated 700ish blunder under pressure knowing I am playing a 10 minute game. Yet you’re calmly explaining so throughly and well every single move and winning in 2.5min I really appreciate your content thank you so much
Yooooo this was amazing. Learned a lot from just this one game as a beginner
I am an old guy (50 years old) just starting to play chess which is a daunting task to say the least. This is one of the best videos I have watched so far. Brought so much clarity to what to look for and was so well explained. Just subscribed to your channel @Daniel Naroditsky and looking forward to watching many more of your videos. Thanks!!
3:40 development
4:38 Bishops (Long diagonal) countermove = profalaxis
6:28 Beginner quick move take
7:42 better you are at chess = violating norms
8:25 FIRST thought after they move
9:07 transformations and Fallout, opening king
9:55 whether you can take a pawn
10:33 a Fork
11:13 look for more
12:43 undefended pieces
15:50 beginners and unexpected moves
17:01 CHECKMATE
Look out for safety of King
- Thank you so much, this is so helpful to my game. Going to take this all on board and focus more on DEVELOPMENT and less on Piece Acquisitions!
Daniel Naroditsky: Chess Grandmaster.
Also Daniel Naroditsky: I've certainly lost a lot of games by knocking out the connection to the router with my feet. (06:00)
"That mechanism in his brain that is responsible for detecting threats may have failed"
Meanwhile I'm wondering why my opponents don't play so badly.
Dude fr. Im 900 and the people I play against play better than this guy. Could’ve been nerves too
Jason Tauro very true. He just made it look so easy
They do. You just play equally as badly. Nardoitsky had his pieces lined up for a checkmate crazy fast. He makes it difficult to defend.
@@rathelmmc3194 Wrong. No legitimate 1200 would leave their bishop en pris in that manner (especially in longer time controls). That guy was either extremely nervous about playing a GM, or he had his rating boosted. But trust me, you do not miss such obvious one move tactics if you actually perform at a 1200 level.
TMaz94, please. 1200s hang pieces like crazy.
When I play chess, I beat everybody, until I met somebody who was actually good at chess. I've been actually putting in effort to get better, and this is an amazing help to watch. Thank you.
This is one of the best chess analysis I have ever seen, I am a beginner and I am stumped!!!! Subscribed!!!!!
I feel so calm watching this.
When I play, time is coming for me like that bear coming for Leo in the Revenant.
Great video. Thanks a lot, Daniel. Really clear and straightforward. I'm going to try and learn better chess to teach my son. He's only four, so for now, I still have the edge :-)
"that mechanism in his brain that detected threats failed" hahah made me laugh so hard
Sharpest, clearest explainer of chess on UA-cam by a considerable margin. Really impressed.
My 14 year old son played you a few years ago(2016) in Hollywood at El Capitan at the movie preview of The Queen of Katwe. My son( 10 years old at the time) played you for 14 minutes. I have the video. My son taught himself to play chess. You were very polite and courteous to us. Thank you!
The best chess teacher!
My question is why didn't he take the queen at 9:13
@@jamesmoses4066 white knight check on black king
"now it's time to deliver a series..of..crushing..blows." THAT CRACKED ME UP!
Imagine thinking you just beat a grandmaster but in reality he accidentally knocked his own internet out with his foot. lmfao
Just found your channel after wanting to learn how to play chess again (haven't played since 5th grade). Please, please, please keep making beginner content like this - I learned SO much. Thank you!
So glad to see a great channel that helps and stimulates the chess interest of newcomers to the game!
This video gives me such a "tutorial video from 2012" vibe
The cams the best hahaha
Unregistered Hypercam 2
I learn chess after pogchamp 1, from complete beginer, now Im 800 thanks to youtube chess like this.
Just stumbled to this video. This guy should give chess lectuers in public universities, just amazing. I love how he simplifies the game.
Man, thank you so much for posting this video. You’re a great teacher, Daniel.
Damn I've just discovered your videos, really nice how you explain everything including the basics. I'm already a little more advanced (1800-2000 on Lichess), however a lot of times I still do dumb mistakes and I never knew how to fix those. This is for sure gonna boost me...thanks a lot!!
Lesson from this video: Chess is like a conversation. Remember to listen to what your opponent is “saying”.
I wish he had said something mentioning that his opponent started with 15 minutes but got checkmated with 14 still remaining
Thanks to Pogchamps for introducing chess to me. I never thought i would be this interested to a game like chess.
I appreciate your videos Daniel. It has helped me and many others improve their games. Thank you.
sir you just earned yourself a follower. that was brilliant and just taught me so much. This format is probably the most educational way to learn chess besides chess puzzles.
"what happened?"
"I was murdered"
1:55 When a FIDE Classical Grandmaster says playing slow games is a "new" experience ^_^
This is exactly the kind of video I was looking for. Every move explained! Subscribed! Thank you.
Thanks very much. I’m really happy to have stumbled upon your UA-cam channel. Please post more such videos aimed at low rated players struggling to get ahead.
He said, "my opponent plays king h1." What he meant was, "my opponent plays king h1, losing immediately."
16:00 did he just casually insult the guy? "Yeah his brain.. just failed."
No, the part of the brain that detects threats failed. Not his/her entire brain.. It happens, sometimes you play fast and not pay enough attention and blunder a piece..
A reading from the book of Naroditsky: And so the Prophet, thy lord, spake upon his flock, “learn from my fallen foe’s mistakes ye mighty, and thou shalt prosper in thine hall”. And his flock rejoiced, for many hath not known of a solid defense for the Ruy Lopez opening. After by the Prophet’s will, after time and dedication put in by his flock, they too found their ranks engorged. Amen.
Amen
Amen
Amen
Wow ur english is great
Amen
Hey Daniel, that was a very helpful video, I found it very insightful, thank you! Look forward to more in the future.
Thanks for this video Daniel it's very helpful as you talked through and explained all moves.
7:10 lol that escalated quickly 😂
POV: Chess videos are coming up on your recommended after watching The Queens Gambit
Daniel: While playing 'noobs' comes across DannyTheDonkey
Also Daniel: Time for another video!!
Magnus Carlsen: *Chuckles* He's in danger