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Top 50 Chess Principles for All Levels: Beginner to Advanced | Opening, Middlegame, Endgame Concepts

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Timestamps:
0:07 - Beginner Chess Principles
0:15 - Principle 1: Control the center
1:08 - Principle 2: Develop pieces quickly
1:35 - Principle 3: Castle before move 10
2:10 - Principle 4: Avoid too many pawn moves
2:40 - Principle 5: Avoid "bad" bishops
3:22 - Principle 6: Avoid moving the same piece twice
4:27 - Principle 7: Don't bring out queen too early
5:44 - Principle 8: Pay attention to f2/f7
6:55 - Principle 9: Watch out for stalemate
7:45 - Intermediate Chess Principles
7:53 - BREAKING 1500!
8:41 - Principle 10: Knights before bishops
9:55 - Principle 11: Connect your rooks
10:53 - Principle 12: Rooks to open/half-open files
11:44 - Principle 13: Knights on the rim are dim
12:54 - Principle 14: Avoid doubled pawns
14:04 - Principle 15: Avoid isolated pawns
14:45 - Principle 16: Avoid backward pawns
15:57 - Principle 17: Don't move pawns in front of castled king
16:53 - Principle 18: Don't open center if your king is there
17:48 - Principle 19: When attacking, don't trade queens
18:49 - Principle 20: If cramped, trade pieces
19:50 - Principle 21: 2 minor pieces better than rook and pawn
21:00 - Principle 22: 3 minor pieces better than queen
22:53 - Principle 23: Rooks are strong on 2nd/7th ranks
24:08 - Principle 24: Doubled rooks on open files are strong
25:43 - Principle 25: Bishops better in open, knights in closed
26:24 - Principle 26: Capture towards the center
27:02 - Principle 27: Activate king in the endgame
28:37 - Principle 28: Trade fianchetto bishop to weaken king
30:03 - Principle 29: Knight on f8, there's no mate
31:17 - Principle 30: Slow down - use your time
31:55 - Principle 31: Don't play hope chess
33:13 - Advanced Chess Principles
33:42 - Principle 32: Don't trade bishop for knight without a reason
35:00 - Principle 33: Meet flank attack with a counterattack in the center
36:45 - Principle 34: Rooks go behind passed pawns
38:25 - Principle 35: 2 connected passed pawns on 6th rank beat a rook
39:27 - Principle 36: Attack in the direction of your pawn chain
41:11 - Principle 37: Knights are best blockaders of passed pawns
41:45 - Principle 38: When ahead, trade pieces (NOT pawns)
43:22 - Principle 39: When behind, trade pawns (NOT pieces)
44:08 - Principle 40: 1 pawn can stop 2 pawns
45:48 - Principle 41: Put pawns on opposite color as your bishop
46:32 - Principle 42: Watch out for pawn storms when castled opposite
47:12 - Principle 43: When attacking, remove key defenders
48:14 - Principle 44: It's easier to attack than defend
48:41 - Principle 45: If c3, then d5
50:12 - Principle 46: If f4, then d5
51:29 - Principle 47: In d4/d5 openings, don't block c pawn
52:13 - Principle 48: Kings can use the crooked path
54:03 - Principle 49: Be carful for poisoned b or g pawns
55:02 - Principle 50: Be flexible about your plans
56:08 - BREAKING 1500!
Welcome to this comprehensive guide on the 50 essential chess principles! Whether you're a beginner, intermediate, or advanced player, this video covers key strategies and techniques to elevate your game. Dive into the intricacies of the opening, middlegame, and endgame, with principles categorized by skill level to ensure you get the most out of your practice.

Пікірлер: 162

  • @ChessVibesOfficial
    @ChessVibesOfficialАй бұрын

    Break through 1500 faster than you thought possible: chessvibes.net/breaking1500

  • @god5458

    @god5458

    Ай бұрын

    How did this comment was 3day ago?🧐🤔🤨😲

  • @NJDJ1986

    @NJDJ1986

    Ай бұрын

    @@god5458 maybe he somehow kept this video privated or unlisted until it's scheduled to be uploaded

  • @NJDJ1986

    @NJDJ1986

    Ай бұрын

    @@god5458 because he had this video unlisted until it's become public for reason

  • @god5458

    @god5458

    Ай бұрын

    @@NJDJ1986 now I get thx

  • @terencewong5281

    @terencewong5281

    Ай бұрын

    I purchased already - for my son with passion in chess who has been watching your channel and wants to improve his skills quickly. Thanks for creating the course!

  • @TheLapinrieska
    @TheLapinrieskaАй бұрын

    I have actually started to hear your voice in my head, while playing chess. When my opponent moves a piece, I hear:"do I care about that, let's do a quick scan" and I think I've become a way better player for it

  • @VexilleThePunisher

    @VexilleThePunisher

    Ай бұрын

    I'm not alone 🥲

  • @danmcleran

    @danmcleran

    Ай бұрын

    Ha! Me too.

  • @jeroen3657

    @jeroen3657

    Ай бұрын

    In the supermarket: There is long line to the left, but on the right there is an old lady paying with cash. What is the best line to que in? ......Well if you had a chance to think about it...

  • @22NICO-he9kn

    @22NICO-he9kn

    Ай бұрын

    Me to bruh😂

  • @Chomta

    @Chomta

    Ай бұрын

    Same happens to me lol

  • @sammarks9146
    @sammarks9146Ай бұрын

    It’s a simple thing, but “take your time” has propelled me from hovering in the 900’s to almost 1100. I agree with what others have said- the way you explain things is simple, humble and straightforward. Thank you.

  • @muratkaraaslan7432

    @muratkaraaslan7432

    Ай бұрын

    Longer time controls (15+10) really help with that.

  • @sammarks9146

    @sammarks9146

    Ай бұрын

    @@muratkaraaslan7432 Yeah, I play 99% 10-minute games. Not a big fan of increment.

  • @pascalladal8125

    @pascalladal8125

    Ай бұрын

    @@sammarks9146 I wasn't either. Just started playing btw. But I think increments diminish the chances of being flagged (opponent play fast and blocking moves to make you waste your remaining time)

  • @sammarks9146

    @sammarks9146

    Ай бұрын

    @@pascalladal8125 Oh, I’m pretty good with the time. Not taking enough of it is my problem :)

  • @shadow234LOL

    @shadow234LOL

    25 күн бұрын

    @@sammarks9146 wow, I wish I could have this superpower of playing fast and not necessarily blundering anything. 🙏

  • @main_domain
    @main_domainАй бұрын

    Тор 50 Chess Principles for all Levels: Begginner to Advanced | Opening, Middlegame, Endgame Concepts # Beginner : 1. Control the center 2. Develop pieces quickly 3. Castle before move 10 4. Avoid too many pawn moves 5. Avoid "bad" bishops 6. Avoid moving the same piece twice 7. Don't bring out your queen early 8. Pay attention to f2/f7 9. Watch out for stalemate # Intermediate: 10. Knights before bishops 11. Connect your rooks 12. Rooks to open or half-open files 13. Knights on the rim are dim 14. Avoid doubled pawns 15. Avoid isolated pawns 16. Avoid backward pawns 17. Don't move pawns in front of castled king 18. Don't open center if your king is there 19. When attacking, don't trade queens 20. If cramped, trade pieces 21. 2 minor pieces are better than a rook + pawn 22. 3 minor pieces are better than a queen 23. Rooks are strong on the 2nd/7th ranks 24. Doubled rooks on open files are strong 25. Bishops better in opened positions, knights in closed 26. Capture towards the center 27. Activate king in the endgame 28. Trade fianchetto bishop to weaken king 29. Knight on f8 there's no mate 30. Slow down - use your time 31. Don't play hope chess # Advanced 32. Don't trade bishop for a knight without a good reason 33. Meet flank attack with a counterattack in the center 34. Rooks go behind passed pawns 35. 2 connected passed pawns on 6th rank beat a rook 36. Attack in the direction of your pawn chain 37. Knights are best blockaders of passed pawns 38. When ahead, trade pieces (NOT pawns) 39. When behind, trade pawns (NOT pieces) 40. 1 pawn can stop 2 pawns 41. Put pawns on opposite color from your bishop 42. Watch out for pawn storms when castled opposite 43. When attacking, remove key defenders 44. It's easier to attack than defend 45. If c3, then d5 46. If f4, then d5 47. In d4/d5 openings, don't block c pawn 48. Kings can use the crooked path 49. Be careful for poisoned b or g pawns 50. Be flexible about your plans

  • @grahamdugan
    @grahamduganАй бұрын

    As clearly as knights on the rim are dim, Chess Vibes is the best of the chess channels. I cannot wait for the course tomorrow!!! My wife has been making fun of me, but I don't care, I can't wait!!

  • @TakuTePuke-qd6df
    @TakuTePuke-qd6dfАй бұрын

    Love the way you explain stuff bro. Just spitting facts. Trim the nonsense and just get straight into it.

  • @SanityCheckOfficial

    @SanityCheckOfficial

    Ай бұрын

    Can I get a Nelson for all areas of my life please? Top tier.

  • @xxxq1460
    @xxxq14609 күн бұрын

    50 Chess Principles Beginner: 1. Control the centre 2. Develop pieces quickly 3. Castle before move 10 4. Avoid making too many pawn moves 5. Avoid "bad" bishops 6. Avoid moving the same piece twice 7. Don't bring out your queen too early 8. Pay attention to the f2/f7 squares 9. Watch out for stalemate Intermediate: 10. Knights before bishops 11. Connect your rooks 12. Rooks to open or half-open files 13. Knights on the rim are dim 14. Avoid doubled pawns 15. Avoid isolated pawns 16. Avoid backward pawns 17. Don't move pawns in front of castled king 18. Don't open centre if your king is there 19. When attacking, do not trade queens 20. If cramped, trade pieces 21. Two minor pieces are better than a rook + pawn 22. Three minor pieces are better than a queen 23. Rooks are strong on the 2nd/7th ranks 24. Doubled rooks on open files are strong 25. Bishops better in open positions, knights in closed 26. Capture towards the centre 27. Activate king in the endgame 28. Trade fianchetto bishop to weaken king 29. Knight on f8, there's no mate 30. Slow down - use your time 31. Don't play hope chess Advanced: 32. Don't trade bishop for knight without a good reason 33. Meet a flank attack with a counterattack in the centre 34. Rooks go behind passed pawns 35. Two connected passed pawns on 6th rank beat a rook 36. Attack in the direction of your pawn chain 37. Knights are best blockaders of passed pawns 38. When ahead, trade pieces (NOT pawns) 39. When behind, trade pawns (NOT pieces) 40. 1 pawn can (sometimes) stop 2 pawns 41. Put pawns on the opposite colour of your bishop 42. Watch out for pawn storms when opposite castling 43. When attacking, remove key defenders 44. It's easier to attack than defend (Offence is the best defence) 45. If c3, then d5 46. If f4, then d5 47. In d4/d5 openings, don't block the c pawn (unless openings like Jobava) 48. Kings can use the crooked path 49. Be careful of poisoned b or g pawns 50. Be flexible about your plans!

  • @awang_ir
    @awang_irАй бұрын

    I know this day should happen! Thanks a lot, Nelson!! You are THE chess teacher in our heart

  • @bennelson6207
    @bennelson6207Ай бұрын

    Only 30 minutes in, but I already found something I was completely unaware of in the intermediate section so I had to comment. I'm a 2000 player and I had never heard the knight on f8 there is no mate saying before. I've recognized the importance of defending the h7 pawn with the knight, but generally i've kept my knight on f6 to do that, which naturally can lead to it getting kicked around. It seems obvious in retrospect, but my solution has always been doubling up defense with another piece if necessary or simply doing my best to prevent my knight from getting harassed to begin with. I'm sure my knight has naturally found its way to f8 before in defensive situations, but it's never been something i've actively kept an eye out for, or went out of my way to make happen previously, and now I will try and implement this idea into my games.

  • @ClarkPotter

    @ClarkPotter

    20 күн бұрын

    I'm a 2075-player and had never heard that either! I have a vague notion of this just bc of the number of times you wind up there, but it would never have occurred to me to consider it its own principle. Thanks for commenting so I don't have to.

  • @seeess925
    @seeess92519 күн бұрын

    Absolute mandatory video. I was always good at chess. But every game, my queen was out in the third move. And I didn't know castling was for safety. I just did it just like any other move if the situation needed. I only started becoming much better after watching a similar video like this from Andrea Bonzet. Who taught me some of these concepts.

  • @Ray-ku1sj
    @Ray-ku1sjАй бұрын

    You did a great job on this video. Keep up the good work. Ray.

  • @DanielFBest
    @DanielFBestАй бұрын

    Excellent, excellent tutorial, thank you. Will check out Breakthrough 1500 :) 🤩

  • @azurehydra
    @azurehydraАй бұрын

    Beautiful tips! I already know many of these are going to help me out.

  • @haviskam
    @haviskam6 күн бұрын

    This s an absolute all-in-one package lesson. Heartfelt thanks.

  • @sonnypenales7
    @sonnypenales77 күн бұрын

    Nice tutorial.Thank you very much

  • @adityachk2002
    @adityachk2002Ай бұрын

    Just today i watched the most popular video on your channel of 35 chess principles

  • @user-xv8jf7fq1s
    @user-xv8jf7fq1s6 күн бұрын

    Thank you for your knowledge ❤

  • @r33th
    @r33thАй бұрын

    You are a godsend for chess players seeking knowledge. These are the most instructive chess lessons I've ever found that aren't behind a paywall. That's how you get people to buy a more in-depth course! Looking forward to it

  • @manojmayekar8457
    @manojmayekar8457Күн бұрын

    Thankyou very much sir. You are awesome

  • @dejavu2706
    @dejavu270616 күн бұрын

    The basics is always important as we are all not GMs. This are all helpful especially if you dont have the time to study all the theories which again we are all mot GMs 😅. Keep this all in mind and you will reach 2000-2500 elo even without fully understanding the theories

  • @darrylkassle361
    @darrylkassle36119 күн бұрын

    Have not been here for a while and good to see Nelson has over half a mil subs. Well done

  • @mertturan5081
    @mertturan508123 күн бұрын

    Unbelievably useful. There should've been more videos like this in chess world.

  • @glauberk9018
    @glauberk9018Ай бұрын

    #51 - Don't put rice on to cook while you're playing

  • @tylerbruce3189
    @tylerbruce318924 күн бұрын

    Lesson 2.4 was awesome in course I was constantly getting my c pawn attacked being too aggressive with my bishop and having to defend and getting my rook forked or worse losing my queen! Thanks Nelson

  • @brass4235
    @brass4235Ай бұрын

    Hey Nelson. Awesome 50 principles video. You are the only chess KZreadr that I've EVER spent $money$ on. I was previously a "Stalemater" on your chess team. I know $2.99/ whoopie! Lol. But in all honesty I gained one of the most important things that I didn't previously have - CONFIDENCE in Myself!!! You actually even reviewed one of my games during a live stream! What could be better than having a NM review your game and give you positive feedback?!?! Just looked through your Break 1500 elo tutorial and ohhh man it looks sick! I wish you had a longer monthly payment plan- something like 12 months @ $19.99/month. I would jump all over it! Unfortunately, I won't be to afford it at this time. Just wanted to say Thanks for putting out so much great free content and allowing everyone the opportunity to learn from your experiences and expertise.

  • @ralkadde
    @ralkadde25 күн бұрын

    Enjoyed this collection of principles very much. 06:54 One way to avoid stalemate is a mate in one by Rd8. (Clearly, if not seen, any check works out as well.)

  • @guythatisdumb3819
    @guythatisdumb3819Ай бұрын

    Yo im a big fan love your tutorials

  • @zoltano_cortez
    @zoltano_cortezАй бұрын

    Just wanted to thank you for all your videos, I always learn something new from them. The tricky part is actually remembering and utilizing the knowledge lol.

  • @Beast_RiderF
    @Beast_RiderFАй бұрын

    Thxx now my Mind is refresh again I'm currently 1900s looking forward to Break 2000 ❤😊😊

  • @ClarkPotter
    @ClarkPotter20 күн бұрын

    Great video. Wow. This is fantastic for new players. Curious that you have #32 - Don't trade a bishop for a knight without good reason, as an advanced principle. It feels late beginner/early intermediate to me.

  • @adrianpilbrow
    @adrianpilbrowАй бұрын

    This is a brilliant lesson! Well done.

  • @doublestarships646
    @doublestarships646Ай бұрын

    Your channel is amazing, dude. You know how to teach so well.

  • @imaniashley1138
    @imaniashley113813 күн бұрын

    Wow, as a beginner these are invaluable tips

  • @gideonkvo7332
    @gideonkvo7332Ай бұрын

    51:35 *stares in jobava london*

  • @rife133

    @rife133

    Ай бұрын

    bro literally me haha

  • @ClarkPotter

    @ClarkPotter

    20 күн бұрын

    Your asses ain't Jobava.

  • @chrisworrell7629
    @chrisworrell762925 күн бұрын

    Almost a Year into chess and im at 1100 elo. I've been watching your stuff. Amazing video....I didn't know about the open file or half open file idea. Its already changing my gameplay, Thanks!

  • @franbrok
    @franbrok12 күн бұрын

    Outstanding video!!! , very useful!

  • @cablestick
    @cablestickАй бұрын

    You're the best Nelson

  • @Petrochess
    @PetrochessАй бұрын

    39:39 *36* _Attack in the direction of your pawn chain_ , this was new to me. Although it seems plausible, I had actually never heard of that. The other 49 principles are more or less well-known after a couple of decades with chess, although I am not much better than approx. 1250 🙂 Cheers, Olaf

  • @franktaggart-qs5ff
    @franktaggart-qs5ffАй бұрын

    Thank you for sharing your experiences on the moves and why

  • @derpymoose9948
    @derpymoose9948Ай бұрын

    This is a great video. I plan to watch it many times. Thank you!

  • @ClarkPotter
    @ClarkPotter20 күн бұрын

    I was a 1900-player (2075 now) before I ever encountered the principle of #11 "connecting rooks." I consider it a superfluous principle and a somewhat odd way to think about what you should be doing. You've occupied the center with a pawn or two, developed your Knights and Bishops, castled, and now it's time to do something with your Q. Usually it's going somewhere like e2, d2, c2, maybe a4 or whatever. You'd also like to get your rooks to center, or on an open or semi-open file. Voila! You've moved your Q and now your rooks are connected! It's not an achievement in and of itself, however. It's just what happens. Additionally, you generally want your pieces protected. Bishops can't protect each other, and Knights are too short range for their mutual protection to really be a thing. Your rooks, however, are long range and spend much of the game on the first rank. When they recapture, they're frequently being captured by another rook. If you wanted that rook there to begin with, you'd likely like to recapture with a rook to replace it. Voila, your rooks are "connected." You never needed to aim for it, though. The power of two connected rooks on the 7th rank IS worth its own principle, however. So that case is covered by that. TLDR: "Connected rooks" just happen and it isn't something to aim for in and of itself.

  • @ClarkPotter

    @ClarkPotter

    20 күн бұрын

    I'm also not attached to what I wrote, and admit it's likely a product of having never encountered the idea and never needed it. If it helps an extreme beginner to think of developing their queen in the opening, then I can see it being somewhat helpful, maybe.

  • @basantchanna8925
    @basantchanna892516 күн бұрын

    I would love a guide/thoughts on what to do once your pieces are developed. So many times my opening accuracy is solid but the middle game is terrible. I end up making inaccuracies/mistakes because pushing a pawn somewhere means that 4 moves later I'm at a slight disadvantage. I think getting the basics down, control the centre etc are all good but there comes a point where you've done all that and your left wondering 'what now?'

  • @yassinkaoukab
    @yassinkaoukabАй бұрын

    I love watching your chess videos...Thank you so much ❤❤❤

  • @TheEthikos
    @TheEthikosАй бұрын

    imo "knights on the rim are grim" sounds better. :)

  • @deepanchakravarthy594
    @deepanchakravarthy59415 күн бұрын

    Nicely summarised 🎉

  • @lotsandlotsofcomics
    @lotsandlotsofcomics26 күн бұрын

    Excellent info. Thank you

  • @sanjaynandalall2260
    @sanjaynandalall226020 күн бұрын

    not even 5 minutes in, and im learning a ton. tysm

  • @GlobalWarmingSkeptic
    @GlobalWarmingSkepticАй бұрын

    On #37 I think it's also important to note is that because knights can jump pieces, they can always move back to where they came from on the next turn, which is unique because other pieces can be short circuited and have their paths blocked by the opponent. Knights can always have control of that square for 3 turns as a result.

  • @CasinoCrenshaw
    @CasinoCrenshaw24 күн бұрын

    Cause of your channel ive been getting better but my tactical game needs to improve as far as remembering moves & defense

  • @atariwashik9223
    @atariwashik9223Ай бұрын

    Your videos are now a MUST 😊!

  • @chess26622
    @chess26622Ай бұрын

    You forgot about THE most important chess principle: DO NOT BLUNDER

  • @TeroKoskinen-xy2zz

    @TeroKoskinen-xy2zz

    Ай бұрын

    "Do not play Knight blunder moves and you lose one move mate"

  • @marcinz.3570
    @marcinz.35704 күн бұрын

    Would love to see even more advanced (though probably more nuanced too) principles. What are the titled players hiding from us?! One I discovered to be very often true: always (if possible of course and not losing) play e5 in Ruy Lopez.

  • @michaelmurray7472
    @michaelmurray747224 күн бұрын

    Brilliant video of 50 chess principles 😊

  • @exuviumisopods
    @exuviumisopodsАй бұрын

    1:00 "control the center of the board". Yet Pirc defense and the Modern defense develop the sides first, in order to attack the center later... Both are very good openings, played by GMs.

  • @genshiroankishmahbdah254
    @genshiroankishmahbdah25425 күн бұрын

    Very valuable knowledge about chess pieces development to ensure winning the game.

  • @nikpaul8550
    @nikpaul8550Ай бұрын

    Watched this video an won the 3 next games, breaking the 1800. Thank you very much, your doing a really good job as a chess trainer. 😃

  • @pran10000
    @pran100007 күн бұрын

    excellent

  • @milowright2415
    @milowright2415Ай бұрын

    Very helpful, thank you!

  • @manuelfuentes4509
    @manuelfuentes450925 күн бұрын

    Principle 29: Knight on f8, there's no mate! 30:05 Very interesting maneuver Nbd7, Nf8...

  • @paulwu1301
    @paulwu1301Ай бұрын

    This is very helpful, thank you!

  • @pascalladal8125
    @pascalladal8125Ай бұрын

    Big day today! Been playing for 3-4 months and it's the first move I recognized by its square name, or rather, by the absence of its name haha. At 36:18 , I listened to so many videos on king's indian I was expecting to hear the usual "c5!" but he confused it for d5 lol.

  • @multiverse737
    @multiverse737Ай бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @Amyerd-Addie
    @Amyerd-Addie13 күн бұрын

    I've always lost to lower level Chess apps, my reasoning has been that I lack strategy from the beginning. Now I know that my lacking of strategy itself lacks basic common sense. Thank you, so much needed speed advice.

  • @arassemiaktas8075
    @arassemiaktas8075Ай бұрын

    I better get my popcorn ready😅

  • @Jogi-1111
    @Jogi-1111Ай бұрын

    Always great to watch !!! But although the rule no. 17 is totally fine, the showed game seems to be more or less equal, if(!) white doesn't resign and instead just play Bxf7+ - or did I miss something here ?

  • @suqmadiq6653
    @suqmadiq6653Ай бұрын

    Chess is such an amazing game. I’m so glad I invited it.

  • @stevemotocrayz2892
    @stevemotocrayz2892Ай бұрын

    Wow..!! GREAT job, Nelson 👍👏.!!

  • @InsaneC4
    @InsaneC4Ай бұрын

    Great Work i love itt !! Keep going ❤️

  • @NJDJ1986
    @NJDJ1986Ай бұрын

    these 50 principles will be helpful, especially the number 22 where Nelson won his game with his knights, bishops, & rooks on board!

  • @davefleury2583
    @davefleury2583Ай бұрын

    Great video.

  • @roymorgan828
    @roymorgan82813 күн бұрын

    These principles work ,but if you have read kasperov book of chess you would learn his mindset that work well with these principles. Sometimes you would have to break from the principles, Sometimes you would have to break from the mindset. This would lead to very little of your own spin on the game. But would teach you to own the game.

  • @Norgie.Noriega
    @Norgie.NoriegaАй бұрын

    Gracias

  • @kaidoChess
    @kaidoChessАй бұрын

    50 baby

  • @piet-0
    @piet-06 күн бұрын

    Principle 18 says, don't open center when the king is there, like moving the two central pawns. But principle 1 says control the center, and you show this by starting to move the two center pawns. But the king is still there, obviously. Doesn't that contradict principle 18? Could you elaborate?

  • @rudrajadhav4381
    @rudrajadhav4381Ай бұрын

    Legend knows it is re-uploaded😂😂😂😂

  • @0_0faizan

    @0_0faizan

    Ай бұрын

    It's not

  • @awang_ir

    @awang_ir

    Ай бұрын

    I would rather say that this is remastered, not just lazy reupload since we got significant improvement over the older version. And yes, I also subscribed to this channel since the early days

  • @michigan53105

    @michigan53105

    Ай бұрын

    Fake news cnn

  • @omygoodyne2

    @omygoodyne2

    Ай бұрын

    @@OpposingForkan*

  • @John-AustinLittle

    @John-AustinLittle

    Ай бұрын

    The first comment was just rude and Unnecessary, but you can't critique someone's grammar and then say you didn't need an "an". You did.

  • @zzzaphod8507
    @zzzaphod8507Ай бұрын

    Interesting video, thanks! July 15-20 is 6 days?

  • @ChessVibesOfficial

    @ChessVibesOfficial

    Ай бұрын

    I meant to say 15 to 19 but my brain told me that 5 days was 15 to 20 lol. Sorry!

  • @hassanalihusseini1717
    @hassanalihusseini1717Ай бұрын

    No 21 is why I consider a rook 4½ points, not 5 points (and a queen 8, not 9).

  • @ArshitRawat-w3j
    @ArshitRawat-w3jАй бұрын

    Love ur tutorials

  • @user-gc2us1yt2z
    @user-gc2us1yt2z8 күн бұрын

    16:29 then what can we do when opponet pin the knight

  • @matthewliu6987
    @matthewliu698720 күн бұрын

    43:58

  • @Ziyad09
    @Ziyad09Ай бұрын

    this so helpful, thx

  • @Josiah_Harder
    @Josiah_HarderАй бұрын

    Nelson I can't make the course but would love to have access to that library can you please make it available afterwards!

  • @ChessVibesOfficial

    @ChessVibesOfficial

    Ай бұрын

    It's lifetime access so everyone can go at their own pace!

  • @iambezapp711
    @iambezapp71111 күн бұрын

    You deserve like share subscribe comment and so on you are the goat that what i have to say ❤❤❤❤

  • @kalpeshb1649
    @kalpeshb1649Ай бұрын

    Hi, I’m watching your videos and these are really really effective. I want to join the course but I’m wondering if the course is in Australian dollar or it’s US dollar 197 whatever.

  • @ChessVibesOfficial

    @ChessVibesOfficial

    Ай бұрын

    It's USD

  • @andrewbennett5911
    @andrewbennett5911Ай бұрын

    Would it still be a half open file if , say , black has doubled pawns on the file ( no white pawns )!?

  • @DendrocnideMoroides

    @DendrocnideMoroides

    Ай бұрын

    yes

  • @andrewbennett5911

    @andrewbennett5911

    Ай бұрын

    @@DendrocnideMoroides thank you ! Thought it prob was , but needed to know for sure .

  • @chidanandachandrashekar1456
    @chidanandachandrashekar145610 күн бұрын

    Princlple 9 is mate in 1 rook to d8

  • @orionspur
    @orionspur24 күн бұрын

    One way to summarize all the rules: Minimize the number of squares your opponent will control upon making their next move. As you improve, extend to deeper "next" moves.

  • @isaachaze1
    @isaachaze111 күн бұрын

    I'm a beginner and probably not a very good one at that, but I gotta say I have had trouble with my king getting trapped behind the three idiot pawns (I call them the "3 stooges"). So at least for me, principle 17 does not work, or sometimes doesn't work. That is not say these vids are not invaluable, because they are

  • @sakthiprabhakar
    @sakthiprabhakar29 күн бұрын

    Dear Coach, Kindly share only principles separately

  • @khalidrashid5632
    @khalidrashid56328 күн бұрын

    Please provide transcript in English

  • @baskas13
    @baskas1325 күн бұрын

    "3 minor pieces are better than a queen" for

  • @adx6355
    @adx6355Ай бұрын

    Me realising this is so litt and aint the breaking 1500. damn

  • @LUVUNBEATABLE
    @LUVUNBEATABLEАй бұрын

    Op

  • @UserIslm
    @UserIslmАй бұрын

    7:34 you missed Rd8 mate in 1

  • @TeroKoskinen-xy2zz
    @TeroKoskinen-xy2zzАй бұрын

    0:28 Nh2 or Ng1 is 3 squares. Knight can control only 2,3,4,6 or 8 squares. But no never 1,5 or 7

  • @arifariffulislam2246
    @arifariffulislam2246Ай бұрын

    Sometime my opponent sac their bishop while i my king is castles kingside , and then their queen comes in . How can i manage that situation pls make a video ❤

  • @MarlonDelr
    @MarlonDelrАй бұрын

    If I only have a money I will join but I need my money to get my mother a glasses so he can clearly see😢😢😢😢😢

  • @mvplawstudents9312

    @mvplawstudents9312

    26 күн бұрын

    *she

  • @Dr.M-ot9or

    @Dr.M-ot9or

    22 күн бұрын

    Get a job. And don't be picky about job. Save enough money so you and each your family member can eat 2 times a day. I know 2 isn't enough but it's better than nothing. At least you all won't starve to death. You can think about anything else later. If you're good at chess, you should join local chess tournaments to win some money. If you always lose and not confident in your chess skills then study mathematics so it's easier for you to learn financial maths in the future. I recommend watch videos from playlists in the KZread channel called ProfessorDaveExplains. From there you can study mathematics from arithmetic all the way to the differential equation. You can also study economics there.

  • @kaiserv1n
    @kaiserv1nАй бұрын

    Usually when im early to a video i comment something out of pocket like "please oil up" but i actually like your videos so im not gonna do that to you

  • @OpposingFork

    @OpposingFork

    Ай бұрын

    you are cringe

  • @cesaraguilar593
    @cesaraguilar593Ай бұрын

    Reupload?

  • @Bliss327
    @Bliss327Ай бұрын

    how much will the course cost