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chess moves to win: Winning Chess Openings Yasser Seirawan, 2003 In Yasser Seirawan's entertaining, easy-to-follow style, they are shown formations that can be used with other White or Black pieces. |
chess moves to win: Forcing Chess Moves Charles Hertan, 2019-09-01 Every chess fan marvels at the wonderful combinations with which famous masters win games. How do they find those fantastic moves? Do they have a special vision? And why do computers outwit us tactically? This rich book on chess tactics proposes a revolutionary method for finding winning moves. Charles Hertan has made an astonishing discovery: the failure to consider key moves is often due to human bias. Your brain tends to disregard many winning moves because they are counter-intuitive or look unnatural. We can no longer deny it, computers outdo us humans when it comes to tactical vision and brute force calculation. So why not learn from them? Charles Hertan’s radically different approach is: use computer eyes and always look for the most forcing move first. By studying forcing sequences according to Hertan’s method you will develop analytical precision, improve your tactical vision, overcome human bias and staleness, enjoy the calculation of difficult positions. This New and Extended Fourth Edition presents 50 pages with new and instructive combinations. With a foreword by three-time US chess champion Joel Benjamin. |
chess moves to win: Winning Chess Openings , |
chess moves to win: How To Beat Anyone At Chess Ethan Moore, 2015-10-02 Learn to take the king like a pro with this essential, easy-to-understand guidebook for chess players everywhere no matter what your skill level! Whether you’ve played a few matches or are completely new to the game, How to Beat Anyone at Chess helps you master leading strategies for one of the hardest games out there. Each page guides you through important moves with easy-to-understand explanations and tips for staying ahead of your opponent. From utilizing the queen's power to slaying your rival’s king, you'll learn all about the traps, squeezes, and sacrifices that give players an extra edge and how you can use these techniques to beat the competition. The ultimate guide to conquering the classic game, How to Beat Anyone at Chess will show you how to become a grandmaster in no time! |
chess moves to win: Logical Chess Irving Chernev, 1957 |
chess moves to win: How to Win in the Chess Openings I.A. Horowitz, 2012-11-14 A beginner-friendly study of chess openings and how you can use your first moves to your advantage Are you feeling frustrated that you’re losing your chess game in the first few moves? Do you want to learn the best strategies for a checkmate? In this accessible book, chess master I. A. Horowitz details how to step up your chess game. He outlines the principles and concepts of opening play, discussing the popular attack and defense openings—including the queen’s gambit, the Sicilian defense, the French defense, and many more— and breaks down their individual moves and grand plans. He also shows the tactical forte of each move and how it ties up with the overall strategical idea. Perfect for people who just learned the rules of chess or more advanced players who want to gain some strategy, How to Win in the Chess Openings will give you the tools you need to win your next game. |
chess moves to win: Invisible Chess Moves Emmanuel Neiman, Yochanan Afek, 2014-02-01 Every chess player knows that some moves are harder to see than others. Why is it that, frequently, uncomplicated wins simply do not enter your mind? Even strong grandmasters suffer from blind spots that obscure some of the best ideas during a game. What is more: often both players fail to see the opportunity that is right in front of their eyes. Neiman and Afek have researched this problem and discovered that there are actually reasons why your brain discards certain ideas. In this book they demonstrate different categories of hard-to-see chess moves and clearly explain the psychological, positional and geometric factors which cloud your brain. Invisible Chess Moves with its many unique examples, instructive explanations and illuminative tests, will teach how to discover your blind spots and see the moves which remain invisible for others. Your results at the board will improve dramatically because your brain will stop blocking winning ideas. |
chess moves to win: Modern Chess Strategy Ludek Pachman, 2012-04-26 The use of the queen, the active king, exchanges, pawn play, the center, weak squares, more. Often considered the most important book on strategy. 298 diagrams. |
chess moves to win: Chess Openings For Dummies James Eade, 2010-08-02 Improve your chess game the fast and easy way You never get a second chance to make a first impression?especially in the game of chess! Chess Openings For Dummies gives you tips and techniques for analyzing openings and strategies for winning chess games from the very first move you make! This friendly, helpful guide provides you with easy-to-follow and step-by-step instructions on the top opening chess strategies and gives you the tools you need to develop your own line of attack from the very start. Includes illustrations to help ensure victory Equips you with the tools and strategies to plan a winning strategy Also serves as a valuable resource for curriculums that use chess as a learning tool Whether you?re a veteran or novice chess player, Chess Openings For Dummies is the ultimate guide to getting a grip on the openings and variants that will ensure you have all the right moves to open and win any chess game. |
chess moves to win: Winning Chess Strategies Yasser Seirawan, Jeremy Silman, 1994 A complete overview of proven chess principles that teaches readers how to deploy their pieces using the right moves at the right time to build small advantages into effective, long-range strategies. |
chess moves to win: Lasker's Manual of Chess Emanuel Lasker, 2013-04-15 Great chess master shares his secrets, including basic methods of gaining advantages, exchange value of pieces, openings, combinations, position play, aesthetics, and other important maneuvers. More than 300 diagrams. |
chess moves to win: How to Get Better at Chess Larry Evans, Jeremy Silman, Betty Roberts, 1991 Chess masters on the art of philosophy & chess, showing the essence of each player's style, strengths & weaknesses. |
chess moves to win: Pandolfini's Ultimate Guide to Chess Bruce Pandolfini, 2008-06-30 From America’s foremost chess coach and game strategist for Netflix’s The Queen’s Gambit comes a comprehensive guide covering all aspects of the game, to improve your technique whether you are a newcomer or a longtime fan. One of America's best-known chess masters, Bruce Pandolfini has helped millions learn the intricacies of chess through his acclaimed books and workshops. In this exciting volume, he presents a complete overview of the entire game and its culture. Structured as a dialogue between a beginning student and an expert teacher, Pandolfini's Ultimate Guide to Chess takes the student step-by-step from fundamentals to advanced, highly strategic play. Combining easy-to-follow diagrams with trenchant and up-to-date analysis, Pandolfini puts a new twist on accepted chess theory, offering a seamless beginning-to-end approach, including: • a short introductory history of the game • the moves, rules, and contemporary notation forms • the basic principles of chess • how to develop an opening repertoire • the art of tactical play • pattern recognition and memory aids • traps and pitfalls to be avoided • middlegame play, strategy, and planning • defense and counterattack • transitions to the endgame and the endgame itself • computers and the future of chess • the best websites for playing chess online With Pandolfini's expert insight into the history and modern world of chess, as well as several appendices to enhance play and appreciation, Pandolfini's Ultimate Guide to Chess makes the perfect gift for players of all ages and will be the benchmark title for chess players for years to come. |
chess moves to win: Winning Chess Irving Chernev, Fred Reinfeld, 2013-11-07 Winning Chess is a truly classic chess book, beloved of chess-mad teenagers since it was first published in 1970, updated and repackaged in algebraic format. Written in lively, conversational style by two prolific and popular chess authors, it is aimed at players who have gone past the beginner stage and want to take their game to a whole new level. Its imaginative themes and instructional method are timeless, and the whole book is shot through with fun and humour. |
chess moves to win: Winning with Reverse Chess Strategy William Reuter, 1998 |
chess moves to win: Secrets of Modern Chess Strategy John Watson, 1999 |
chess moves to win: Chess Openings Theory and Practice I. A. Horowitz, 2015-06-07 Speaking for myself and for players of my strength, Chess Openings: Theory and Practice is the greatest aid I have ever seen for preparing for a tournament. Speaking for all other players, the book is a must. Current thinking on all important lines is meticulously presented, offering myriad, clear-cut ideas a completely new and effective arsenal of weapons. -Samuel Reshevsky, United States Open Champion. Chess Openings Theory and Practice is a remarkable book, unequaled by any book of that era or since. It is not a mere openings book with long columns of moves followed at the end by punctuation marks such as + -- or =. It presents opening ideas and games, often including the first game where each opening was played, plus the history of the opening, the names of famous players who played this opening and the ideas and plans on which the opening is based. It provides idea variations. These are variations that may not actually occur in actual practice, but are what you would play if given the chance. No other book does that, at least not in English and not to this extent. |
chess moves to win: Chess Openings for White, Explained Lev Alburt, Roman Dzindzichashvili, Eugene Perelshteyn, Al Lawrence, 2006 Shows you how to start your chess games as dynamically and accurately as the greatest grandmasters in the world. |
chess moves to win: Pawn Structure Chess Andrew Soltis, 2013-02-14 Every chess player needs to know how to handle his pawns. Pawns form the 'playing fields' of chess games, a semi-permanent 'structure' that can determine whether a player wins or loses. This comprehensive guide to pawn structure teaches the reader where pieces are best placed, which pawns should be advanced further or exchanged, and why certain structures are good and others disastrous. This invaluable book is a major update of this chess-world classic, first published in 1975 and unavailable for several years. |
chess moves to win: Modern Chess Strategy with an Appendix on Go Edward Lasker, 2018-12-20 This book is a revision of the authors famous CHESS STRATEGY which sold over 40,000 copies and has been the Chess Bible for most of today's younger masters. |
chess moves to win: 101 Winning Chess Strategies Angus Dunnington, 1999 Without strategy, a chess game is just a series of tactical tricks. A good strategy binds together the tactics, and enables a player to make methodical progress towards victory. This book makes sure you will never be short of winning strategies. Angus Dunnington utilizes his many years of chess playing and training to provide an arsenal of ideas that can be employed in many types of position. These plans have been proven in many grandmaster games, so you can be sure that by using them your game will be soundly based. |
chess moves to win: The Fianchetto Solution Emmanuel Neiman, Samy Shoker, 2016-10-13 A Complete, Solid and Flexible Chess Opening Repertoire for Black & White – with the King’s Fianchetto When experienced chess teacher Emmanuel Neiman learned that some of his pupils hesitated to play in competitions for fear of being crushed in the opening, he wanted to help. Neiman knew that amateurs have little time to seriously study opening theory, so he had to come up with a practical, complete, easy-to-learn and solid opening repertoire that would not outdate rapidly. And that is what he did. Neiman advises amateurs to play (with both colours!) the flexible King’s Fianchetto system, where the Bishop is a defender of the King and at the same time an attacker. No matter what side you are, you use the same basic ideas: as White you are targeting the light squares and as Black the dark squares, while applying roughly the same strategies, plans and tactical motifs. Neiman has teamed up with Samy Shoker, who gained the Grandmaster title by mainly playing the King’s Fianchetto systems (and sometimes beating 2700+ rated players with it!). The result is a complete and practical repertoire which will give club players a sound and flexible middlegame position they can feel at home in. In many lines Neiman and Shoker not only present a solid approach but also a sharp and aggressive alternative. The authors don’t promise you a large advantage every time you play their system, but one thing is certain: after studying this entertaining book you can play the opening confidently and you will be a better all-round player because you have learned many essential middlegame lessons. Even (very) strong players will find the ideas of Neiman and Shoker useful as an easy-to-play occasional weapon. |
chess moves to win: Winning Chess Openings Fred Reinfeld, 1978 Most ordinary players don't know what to aim for or how to take advantage of their opponent's mistakes at the beginning of a game. Yet the first moves are extremely important. Each opening has a characteristic pattern which can be learned through studying the ten lessons in this book. The beginner is given a blueprint of the opening and the middle game. They are then shown the consequences of proper play and the results of the faulty judgement. The late Fred Reinfeld, an editor at of Chess Review and champion of the Manhattan and Marshall chess clubs, was the most respected of American chess writers. |
chess moves to win: Winning Chess Ted Nottingham, Al Lawrence, Bob Wade, 2000-08 Kids love to win--and any kid who has begun (or wants to begin) learning and loving this timeless game will cherish this clever follow-up to Winning Chess Piece by Piece. These brilliant tactics and techniques will hone and develop young players' skills and give their brains a real workout...while they're having a great time. They'll learn all the chess master's tricks of the trade: how to calculate moves far in advance, with the help of examples from winning games; strategies used by world champions--including Gary Kasparov's discovered check and skewer; Improving the Pieces to get in the best position to strike; and end game techniques. Along the way, quizzes help players chart their progress. Plus: you get a certificate for successfully completing the course! |
chess moves to win: Understanding the Chess Openings Sam Collins, 2005 An invaluable guide to how modern chess openings are played. This major new work surveys all chess openings, providing a guide to every critical main line and featuring extensive descriptions of the typical strategies for both sides. These commentaries will be welcomed by all club and tournament players, as they will better help them handle middlegame positions arising from each opening. |
chess moves to win: The Blue Book of Charts to Winning Chess Arthur M. Stevens, Sam Sloan, 2011-01-01 This is THE book that first introduced a concept that has revolutionized tournament chess for most players. The concept is simply to create a database of chess games, sorted by openings, and then see which opening moves produce the best results. This book concludes that the overall winning percentage for White is 59%. It shows that the moves 1. d4 and 1.c4 win 60% of the time whereas 1.e4 scores only 59%. Regarding the second move, this book shows that against 1. e4, both 1. . . . c5 and 1. . . . e5 score equally well with 42% for Black, whereas the French Defense 1. . . . e6 and the Caro-Kann Defense, 1. . . . c6, do much worse, scoring only 38% for the Black side. This book is based on 56,972 games, all compiled and sorted, showing the winning and drawing position for each best move in the chess openings. For example, after the moves of the French Defense, 1. e4 e6 2. d4 d5, it surprisingly shows that the move 3. e5, the Advance Variation, produces the highest winning percentage, as opposed to 3. Nc3 or 3. Nd2. |
chess moves to win: Chess Openings Tim Ander, 2019-01-05 Do you love playing chess? Do you tend to use the same predictable openings when beginning a game? Would you like to learn the best ones that will improve your overall strategy? Chess has been played for around 1500 years and has lost none of its appeal to those who like to think tactically and outwit opponents with skill. The game can be learned fairly quickly but mastering it takes much longer and the opening moves are often crucial. In this book, Chess Openings: Learn the Fundamental Chess Openings for Winning Strategies, you can learn some of the moves that are the hallmarks of a great strategy, including: The King's Gambit Ruy Lopez Sicilian defense King's Indian defense Halloween Gambit And more!; Many people see the end move, when the game draws to its conclusion, as the most critical one. But, as shown in Chess Openings, it can often be the first ones that set the scene for a successful outcome. Get a copy of this illuminating book and see how your opening moves could improve your chances of victory and your overall game. |
chess moves to win: The Ideas Behind the Chess Openings Reuben Fine, Sam Sloan, 2012-01-20 This book presents the indispensable foundations for the understanding of the variations of the chess openings. It has been said that ideas are weapons. That is certainly as true in chess as in any other field. A mastery of a little theory which conveys real understanding of the game is infinitely more valuable than a carefully memorized compilation of endless moves. Paradoxically, a thorough grasp of the ideas behind the openings, which are relatively few in number, is a royal road to knowledge which eliminates much of the drudgery associated with remembering a long series of variations. My object in this work is to present the necessary ideology as concisely as possible. This is one of the great classic works on chess by one of the strongest chess players in history. All to often the most recent chess books are just database dumps based on millions of chess games. Our young chess players often undertake the task of memorizing thousands of variations. Let me let you in on a little secret: The world's leading chess grandmasters do not memorize thousands of opening lines. Rather, they study and work them out. They remember the ideas behind the moves, not necessarily the moves themselves. Once they recall the reasons for the moves, they can work out and re-discover the best moves themselves. There are many new moves and opening variations that have become popular and fashionable since this book was published. However, the ideas behind these openings have remained the same. This book is just as valid as when it was first published. Reuben Fine was one of the world's strongest grandmasters of chess. |
chess moves to win: The Complete Book of Chess Strategy Jeremy Silman, 1998 An easy-to-understand guide to chess strategy -- conceptual planning -- has always been the amateur's dream. This book makes that dream a reality. This comprehensive guide in dictionary form, the first of its kind, makes all aspects of chess strategy quick, easy, and painlessly accessible to players of all degrees of strength. Each strategic concept is listed alphabetically and followed by a clear, easy-to-absorb explanation accompanied by examples of how this strategy is used in practice. Such great World Champions as Steinitz, Capablanca, Petrosian, Fischer, and Karpov have used these strategies in virtually all of their games. Now you can arm yourself with their weapons. As you incorporate these weapons into your own play, they will enrich your appreciation of the game and lead you to one beautiful victory after another. |
chess moves to win: Survive & Beat Annoying Chess Openings Eric Schiller, John Watson, 2003-06-17 This is the chess doctor's handbook to the very popular traps and pitfalls faced by beginning and intermediate chess players. Opening traps are the single most annoying stratagem, that is, for unprepared players. This book shows you how to handle these traps as both Black and White and to set the same traps yourself. Schiller and Watson provide practical remedies from both the White and Black perspectives to the annoying variations that opponents will often choose instead of the well-known main lines. For key openings, the authors provide two separate remedies to appeal to both the attacking and positional player. Unique charts and graphics make learning these remedies easy and fun! 266 pages |
chess moves to win: Chess Openings for Kids John Watson, Graham Burgess, 2011 An introduction to the names and starting moves of 50 chess openings, highlighting several opening traps. |
chess moves to win: Winning Chess Endings Yasser Seirawan, 2003 Shows readers endgame strategies by putting the player in the middle of the action with firsthand stories taken directly from famous matches. |
chess moves to win: Winning Chess Tactics Yasser Seirawan, 1999-07 The essential guide to the use of tactics the watchdogs of strategy that take advantage of short-term opportunities to trap or ambush an opponent and change the course of a game in a single move |
chess moves to win: 50 Ways to Win at Chess Steve Giddins, 2007 In a sequel to the hugely successful 50 Essential Chess Lessons, Steve Giddins now presents 50 games that each illustrate an important winning method. This engaging and highly readable book is a painless way to build your personal arsenal of techniques and ideas. The games are mostly from the modern era, but with a few classic examples chosen to show key themes in as clear a way as possible. In these cases, the defender may have never seen the critical idea before, and fails to react appropriately. We then move on to more complex examples where the attacker needs to overcome stiffer resistance. Giddins repeatedly shows that despite the tactical complexity of many of these battles, the fundamental concepts can be grasped by all chess-players, and will help them navigate through apparently intimidating terrain. The many topics include: * Attacking weak colour complexes * The principle of two weaknesses * Choosing the right exchanges * Devastating opening preparation * Manoeuvring in 'restraint' structures * Handling must-win situations |
chess moves to win: Play Winning Chess Yasser Seirawan, Jeremy Silman, 2003 'When most people learn to play chess, they usually memorise the movements of the pieces and then spend years pummelling away at each other with little rhyme and even less reason. Though I will show you how each piece leaps around, what it likes to do |
chess moves to win: Winning Chess Strategy for Kids Jeff Coakley, Antoine Duff, Chess'n Math Association, 2000 |
chess moves to win: 100 Awesome Chess Moves Eric Schiller, This collection of brilliant ideas from real tournaments is not just regular combinations or tactical swindles, but moves of stunning originality. Schiller has selected one hundred awesome moves, and through game positions, examples, and clearly explained concepts, shows players how to improve their grasp of deep positional understandings and swashbuckling tactics. You'll learn how to reinforce your gut instincts, to not just reach for the best move, but the inspired one. 288 pages. |
chess moves to win: How to win 212 quick chess (26 moves or less) against the high chess software + All the chess rules and much more J.C. Grenon, 2016-07-30 How to win 212 quick chess (26 moves or less) against the chess game software of top level. Full description of these 212 winning chess with the pictures of the pieces and all the chess game rules with full of diagrams in order to illustrate all the rules and much more are included in this chess book. Among these 212 winning chess, there are 27 with the black pieces. In order to win against the chess game software of top level, you must make many sacrifices; without that, it's almost impossible to win against. Replay these 212 winning chess and you will understand that reality ! The author is the winner of 809 winning chess against the chess game software of top level. At the chess game, the russian empire is on the wane ! |
chess moves to win: Chess Openings John Carlsen, 2022-04-07 CAN YOU WIN A GAME IN JUST 5 MOVES? If you want to know more about how to set up for a victorious game, please keep reading... Did you know that if you make the first 4-5 moves right, for the rest of the game, you just have to make sure you don't make dumb decisions? Well, that's the truth. And if you really want to make your victory effortless, even against more advanced players, you must master those 5 moves to the best of your ability. Take a look at a couple more things you'll find inside this book: -5 basic opening principles that'll help you start the game with confidence -Classic vs. Modern OPENINGS, what's the difference, and which ones are superior? -What's the difference between 'AN' opening and 'THE' opening? (the difference can make you win or lose the game) -'Piece Coordination' and 'Control Of The Center' - two of 5 most powerful opening strategies you'll find inside this book -How to use 'Flank Openings' for a strong and effortless victory? -How to respond to your opponent's first aggressive moves and use them against him over and over again? -Much much more So don't wait, scroll up, click on Buy Now and Start Reading! |
chess moves to win: How to Win in the Chess Openings I. A. Horowitz, 1986-03-07 International Master Al Horowitz goes through every major chess opening system and provides just one line of play for White, one line of play for Black, and the reason for each move by White or Black. How to Win in the Chess Openings will not show the reader how to win every game, but it will provide an easy route which will enable the player to get a reasonable, playable position out of the opening with good winning chances, without having to memorize a bunch of opening lines. |
10 Fastest Checkmates: Notation and Diagrams - Chess.com
Jul 21, 2020 · Learn checkmates that will help you earn easy wins in chess and avoid tricks from your opponent. Improve your chess game with these easy checkmating patterns.
Chess Next Move - Best next move calculator
ChessNextMove.com can give you your best next chess move in any chess situation. Simply set up the board and press play.
How to Win at Chess (with Pictures) - wikiHow
Mar 16, 2025 · To win at chess, you need to be constantly thinking a few moves in advance, setting up longer, more complicated attacks to outfox your opponent. Your first move is …
6 Chess Tricks to Win Fast: Success Tips for Amateurs
Jan 25, 2023 · Whether you're looking to win at the royal game online or at your local chess club, here are six proven chess tricks that will help you grab the initiative fast and will …
The Best Chess Strategy (Simple and Powerful) - Remote Chess Ac…
May 31, 2018 · In this lesson, you will learn the best chess strategy to help you win the right moves in almost any chess position. ☉ Chess Strategy for Beginners. Maybe the strategy …
10 Fastest Checkmates: Notation and Diagrams - Chess.com
Jul 21, 2020 · Learn checkmates that will help you earn easy wins in chess and avoid tricks from your opponent. Improve your chess game with these easy checkmating patterns.
Chess Next Move - Best next move calculator
ChessNextMove.com can give you your best next chess move in any chess situation. Simply set up the board and press play.
How to Win at Chess (with Pictures) - wikiHow
Mar 16, 2025 · To win at chess, you need to be constantly thinking a few moves in advance, setting up longer, more complicated attacks to outfox your opponent. Your first move is about setting up …
6 Chess Tricks to Win Fast: Success Tips for Amateurs
Jan 25, 2023 · Whether you're looking to win at the royal game online or at your local chess club, here are six proven chess tricks that will help you grab the initiative fast and will definitely give …
The Best Chess Strategy (Simple and Powerful) - Remote Chess …
May 31, 2018 · In this lesson, you will learn the best chess strategy to help you win the right moves in almost any chess position. ☉ Chess Strategy for Beginners. Maybe the strategy that you are …
15 Fastest Chess Checkmates - TheChessWorld
Jul 24, 2023 · Chess is THE game where every move is a narrative in itself, a clash of ideas and strategies played out on a 64-squared board. From the classic Fool’s Mate to the less orthodox …
Top 10 Fastest Checkmate For Early Win In Chess - Royal Chess …
Aug 4, 2023 · However, there are specific sequences of moves that can lead to an incredibly fast checkmate in chess. The same may put your opponent off guard and secure you an early victory. …
10 Fastest Chess Moves To Win | SquareOff
Nov 24, 2022 · You can use these chess moves to win chess contests. The more you practise, the faster you can integrate them into your game. Since you cannot risk being on the receiving end …
Top Chess Moves to Win—From Openings to Endgames
Apr 22, 2025 · The question remains the same: what are the main chess moves to win? In this article, we will understand all the strategies and specific moves that can tip the balance of any …
Win Quickly in Chess with Fastest and Easiest Checkmates
Dec 12, 2023 · The Fool’s mate is the fastest way to win a chess game. Black finds the checkmate because the diagonal is completely open and there are no exit paths or pieces that can block the …