Chess tips

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Tom

I would like to start a thread that involves chess tips.  I know there is no magic bullet in chess, but perhaps a good tip will pull one out of a slump, which I seem to find myself in from time to time on the chessboard.  I'm not talking about the basic 10 tips that everybody on this site probably already know, rather a personal strategy that you take into battle with you in each game.  Thank you for your input.

CircleSquaredd

Play lots of blitz and play against higher rated opponents. The better your opponent is the more you can learn from him.

Dont move too fast! I have that problem that if I would of only looked a little longer I would've seen my error.

Find openings you like and stick with them. Best not to experiment against higher rated opponents

Dont play drunk! Wine is fine, but liquor your rating drops quicker!

Base you ideas on the position, not what you feel like doing.

vagamundo

don't let your opponent's pawns get too far ahead on the board... they'll be a pain midgame &, if the game gets that far, endgame promoting will be easier.

xMenace

Play with a plan. A bad plan is better than no plan.

RyanMK

Remember: It's just a game! People tend to forget this and get too overworked on positions. Sometimes you just have to go with your gut instinct and go with the flow. Have fun!

RoyalFlush1991

Tip #1 : If you wanna get better avoid listening to overall chess tips or advice that don't reference specific position. Chess isn't golf, it's more of an art. Try telling Picasso to paint more geometrically XD.

Edit: xMenace's plan suggestion aside, that's always a good idea in chess. Ryan makes a good point too, sometimes it's just about playing what seems to be right and trusting your ability to recognize familiar patterns.

P.S. Just an aside to circlesquared, why lots of blitz chess? You don't get good at normal time controls by playing at fast ones, its the other way around.

jeaczr4242

burp burp

CircleSquaredd
RoyalFlush1991 wrote:

P.S. Just an aside to circlesquared, why lots of blitz chess? You don't get good at normal time controls by playing at fast ones, its the other way around.


Blitz chess is how you get good. CC with 2 days a move is helpful but you dont feel the game the same way. A ten minute game is a ten minute chess lesson

donngerard

always play with a higher oppoenent (rating)

Unholycyclone

I wouldn't recommend ALWAYS playing better people, I would say have a healthy balance of people that are better, similar and less, that way you don't forget how to control situations or defend against the odds.

aadaam

If your best chance of salvaging a game you really should lose is your opponent having a heart attack, resign. You shouldn't waste too much time on idiot positions. This is a serious and valuable tip and I promise it will improve your play.

Deathknlght

i dont understand those tips i just love to move my piece without thinking and then i win!! dont no why i play 4 fun ;)

Chessroshi

I like to play what I call soldier chess. For each move I make, I try and have two reasons for making it. I like to think of my pieces as soldiers, and when they die in the field of battle, I imagine trying to explain their death. When I do that, the pat answer 'Well, it was my turn', just doesn't seem to cut it as an answer for justifying my moves anymore. Something like 'with little Pete the Pawns valiant service, we were able to penetrate the enemy stronghold and bring in the heavy calvalry' sounds like a much better reason for a move to be chosen. The short version of this tip is : Hold yourself accountable for your moves.

Chessroshi

Tip 2: Your physiology is just as important as your psychology. Put good stuff in your body, and you will get good output. Consider how your current diet/beverage choices make your body feel. I'm sure the blended juice and frozen fruit smoothie will do much better for mental clarity than the caffeinated buzz of coffee. Proper nutrition can do much more for the quality of chess and overall mental health than most people realize.

Mainline_Novelty

http://blog.chess.com/view/links-to-wise-things-said-about-chess

They usually come daily.

KedDuff

Always know what you oponents next moves are.

Try to predict your oponent 2 or 3 moves ahead.

you should know his best move before even he knows it.

khuiji

I agree wth chessroshi about physiology but in a different light. After Bluegene, the supercomputer, beat Garry Kasparov in 1997 he took a long walk. While on the walk (if I have the story straight) he rethought how to play chess. Then he beat the crap out of the Bluegene. I try and take breaks in between games even if I win. It gives you time to reflect and your brain time to get some oxygen.

 

I am no master but one thing I noticed nobody commented on is emotion. You must be a stoic philosopher to win. Well, not really but the point is to NOT be vengeful for that is how you will surely loose.

Phelon

In chess a clear head and intense focus are your biggest psychological advantages. If you're too caught up in your ego like fischer was you will underestimate your opponent and lose. Its surprising he got so far with that attitude if you ask me.

Chessroshi

Remember: EVERY single move in chess is a struggle to achieve an unstoppable advantage in force. This advantage in force is the ONLY way to overpower the opposing king and win. Study the elements like time, space, force (potential and applied), and study the mechanics of chess such as piece movement and tactics.

homosapien15

Be patient!  I allow the attacks to come to my well defended pieces, and soon my opponent's position is so weak, that my attack is usually unstoppable