My thread
1. "Insert chess game or diagram" button, shown by chessboard
2. Set up the position with the setup position at the top.
3. Click moves and make any moves necessary for puzzle (12/5/2020 update: you can right click and "set begin" a move so the puzzle begins after it, so you can see the previous move like in many tactics puzzles, necessary for things like en passant, etc.)
4. Fill out any details in details
5. In Theme, be sure to click flip board if playing black for view, and be sure to click puzzle to make it a puzzle.
6. Title goes in Location if you want one
Testing a PGN version where I edit the puzzle out of the initial move to set it up with the lines it reviewed afterwards, trickier to do but gives more info at the end to sort out some potential confusion. No idea which one I'll stick with or if I'd use some combination of both.
A Good thread!
Thanks! I'm working on improving a bit and am building up a set of puzzles to work on, get a bit more familiar with openings. I keep adding puzzles and I imagine I'll be refining this thread more with time. It's a work in progress.
Puzzles to review the system
Openings
I plan on making basic posts for openings, with variations I want to consistently use. Formatted as my (insert opening here), with the lines I intend to remember. At the moment I'm not planning anything complicated, and by no means would I claim to be setting up the best moves, it just gives me something to pin down.
To look at later. https://www.chess.com/game/live/5828697686
Grabbing the machine version in case I care about that later, just storing this up for future review.
Adding another game to check for later. https://www.chess.com/live/game/5835653777
Computer stuff below.
https://www.chess.com/forum/view/game-analysis/my-analysis-thread?page=1#last_comment Made a thread to put my games down and analyze them. Didn't want to fill this thread with a ton of those, I have other plans for this.
Just a thread I made to randomly mess with stuff. I might make some sample puzzles, etc. for myself.