Funny feeling to watch the video after I watched the game live on lichess a day before. I feel like a GM: "I know this variation! I've seen this trick before!"
Everyone asking why you didn't play Qe8. Fake news and controversies such as saying "my queen is trapped" when it's not, that's what keep this thing moving 😁 Great content, keep it up, proud of you
Vs 2 knights I'd consider: 1. e4 c6 2. Nf3 d5 3. Nc3 Bg4 4. h3 Bxf3 5. Qxf3 Nf6 Should be fine for black Obviously if they play Nc3 then Nf3 black can play the exact same move order without difficulty If Be2 before h3 then simply Nf6, h3 Bxf3 Bxf3 and Black even gets e5 early
@@ReiAyasuka After 1.e4 c6 2.d4 d5 3.Nc3 dxe4 4.Nxe4 Nf6 5.Nxf6 exf6 6.c3 Bd6 7.Bd3 0-0, white doesn't have to fear the check after 8.Qc2 Re8+, because he can now block with the knight with 9.Ne2, and he has pressure on h7 anyways. I've often seen black here play 9...g6 and then white gets a powerful attack with 10.h4. Black can now play like he did in the game above with 10...Bg4, but now white has 11.f3, and if 11...Bg3+, white can sidestep, as he did in the game above, with 13.Kf1. it's very similar to the game above, but I just think that it's better for white to keep the option of putting that knight in e2.
Wow taking down the famous opening invented by Genghis Khan when his army was invaded by a battalion of automobiles instead of tanks causing him to exclaim "car, oh?"
He gave up too quickly.... Knight to B7 and you can draw it by allowing the take ... then taking the pawn back, then moving the king to the D file and you have squashed the attack but you're down one bishop... still a draw