Uhhh I had triple pawn then instantly took a chance to have three queen but one queen got ###### by Jimmy and than two queen went hunting the hunter😂😂😂😂
This is a helpful video but pleaseeee just get a microphone or something text to speech voices make for the worst sounding, most brainrot feeling content. Even if your voice sounds weird the content will be 300% more appealing
Nice! I have a few more 1.) Attack in the direction of your pawn chain. That's where you have space. Especially bishops are restricted in the opposite direction. 2.) The fewer pawn islands the better. A long pawn chain only has one base, while 3 short pawn chains have 3 bases that can be targeted. 3.) Horses need stable squares. A knight is the only piece where if it is forced to move, it cannot defend any of the same squares it was defending before, while a bishop or rook can move along the diagonal/file. 4.) Loose pieces drop off. Most tactics involve a fork. Defend your pieces before they're attacked so captures become trades.
Remember that all of these tips have exceptions. On of the biggest weaknesses of lower level players is that they play un-dynamically. If you rigidly stick to a tip like ”never have doubled pawns”, you can rarely improve. If you play correctly, it is often the best continuation to get an isolated, backwards, or doubled pawns, not castling, bishops for knights, etc.
@@fudgenugget8875 I know, and I'm not commenting on the video itself, but more so on the fact that people fail to make it past intermediate level because they stick rigidly to principles and play without dynamism.
I've only just started watching these videos and I have to say that I enjoy this style a lot more, with less memes. It's less distracting and more useful. Thank you
"Dont move the same piece twice in the opening" Doesnt apply to Ruy Lopez opening where you need to retreat or capture with the b5 Bishop when attacked with a6.
Not moving the same piece multiple times in the opening is kind of questionable since I've had great success with the alekhine defense for over a decade and the very principal of the alekhine is moving the same knight more than once
In the late game, rook and a pawn is potentially a queen and a rook, which means they are more valuable than 6 points worth of lesser pieces, even though they both have the same value. In this situation, pawn is the most important piece which must be protected. If needed, by sacrificing the rook, and then leading the last pawn to the queen by protecting with a king.
It really depends on the minors and position, a bishop is really worth like 3.1-3.2 pawns and having the bishop pair when your opponent doesn't is worth a bit less than one pawn on an open board. The rook pair is also worth a similar bonus and the value of a pawn can be huge or worthless depending on if it is passed or doubled and how many times it has moved. Honestly the material system is just not very useful beyond a few basic lessons it teaches.
It's really obvious when I move the queen too early, after that, queen h5, pawn g6, queen takes pawn e5 check, block either the bishop, queen, or knight to e7, then queen takes rook to h8
i always breaks 2nd tip because i use a skirmish tactic in the beginning I was struggling at 400 and 500s before using it now I can confirm that I'm improving