Very good opening for beginners

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Kamaludeen123
Can You Please Tell Me A Very Good Opening For Beginners
ESP-918

Sokolsky opening (good opening as white , starts with B4 , includes some theory to it, very tricky , especially good for faster games, good opening when your rating under 2200 after that this opening becomes weak)

kindaspongey

For someone seeking help with choosing openings, I usually bring up Openings for Amateurs by Pete Tamburro (2014).
http://kenilworthian.blogspot.com/2014/05/review-of-pete-tamburros-openings-for.html

https://chessbookreviews.wordpress.com/tag/openings-for-amateurs/
I believe that it is possible to see a fair portion of the beginning of Tamburro's book by going to the Mongoose Press site.
https://www.mongoosepress.com/excerpts/OpeningsForAmateurs%20sample.pdf
Perhaps Kamaludeen123 would also want to look at Discovering Chess Openings by GM John Emms (2006).
https://web.archive.org/web/20140627114655/http://www.chesscafe.com/text/hansen91.pdf
"Each player should choose an opening that attracts him. Some players are looking for a gambit as White, others for Black gambits. Many players that are starting out (or have bad memories) want to avoid mainstream systems, others want dynamic openings, and others want calm positional pathways. It’s all about personal taste and personal need.
For example, if you feel you’re poor at tactics you can choose a quiet positional opening (trying to hide from your weakness and just play chess), or seek more dynamic openings that engender lots of tactics and sacrifices (this might lead to more losses but, over time, will improve your tactical skills and make you stronger)." - IM Jeremy Silman (January 28, 2016)
https://www.chess.com/article/view/picking-the-correct-opening-repertoire
http://chess-teacher.com/best-chess-openings/
https://www.chess.com/blog/TigerLilov/build-your-opening-repertoire
https://www.chess.com/blog/CraiggoryC/how-to-build-an-opening-repertoire
https://www.chess.com/article/view/learning-an-opening-to-memorize-or-understand
https://www.chess.com/article/view/the-perfect-opening-for-the-lazy-student
https://www.chess.com/article/view/3-ways-to-learn-new-openings
https://www.chess.com/article/view/how-to-understand-openings
https://www.newinchess.com/Shop/Images/Pdfs/9035.pdf
https://web.archive.org/web/20140627110453/http://www.chesscafe.com/text/hansen169.pdf
https://www.newinchess.com/Shop/Images/Pdfs/9029.pdf
https://www.newinchess.com/Shop/Images/Pdfs/7277.pdf

The_Chin_Of_Quinn
Kamaludeen123 wrote:
Can You Please Tell Me A Very Good Opening For Beginners

Yes.

It's called: "develop all your pieces and castle you snail-skulled [removed -- MOD], and don't blunder pieces to 1 ply threats like your [removed -- MOD] mother."

Misunderestimated1

Kamaludeen123,

 

The Stonewall and the Colle systems are both great for beginners.  The ideas are similar and easy to understand.  

bong711

IMO. beginners play e4 openings. As black Slav defense and Carokann. When boredom starts, explore other openings and defenses.

bong711

As white, Scotch, Sicilian Alapin, panov attack in Carokann, Exchange in French. Early exchanges of pawns and pieces makes the game less complicated and more suitable for beginners.

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