If you’re talking about the position I think you are, if you take with the queen, there’s still the d pawn between the queen and the king, so the queen wouldn’t get pinned.
For anyone wondering, after queen takes the knight and black plays Nc6, you have to move the queen again because after Bb4 your queen is pinned to the king (like the comment says). You should, instead, take with the b pawn like the vid suggests
The Vienna is way too complex to be covered in a short. There’s a ton of variations in the mainline alone, I’m not even gonna mention the Vienna Game, where the opponent doesn’t play Nf6. Maybe you could make a video about the Vienna if you had the time. No pressure, though.
Another idea in the main line is after queen f3 you play Nc6 because after takes with the knight you have Nd4 and the queen doesn’t defend e4 anymore so your pawn can’t immediately be taken like if you just played a random move
@Vas Vuk I've use to really love the game it's been about 20 years since I last played online is very different vibe from irl. Am trying to find this love for chess again. Don't give up bro just play and enjoy it best you can.
instead of Nxc3 what about nc6 bb5 Nxc3 you take with a pawn the Qh4 g3 Qe4 queen itrade Bd7 And if you dont take c6 i take e5 i just a have a better endgame with bishop pair
@@ExplosiveTN123 be3 you mean just bf5 Bd3 Qxf3 Nxf3 be4 Bxe4 Dxe4 you move knight And i take E5 The endgame is very good Close to even winning i think
Don't study openings if you are new to chess. Learn basic principles, basic tactics and basic checkmate patterns, also learn to not make 1 move blunders.
Don't memorize this stuff if you're new. Just play a simple opening for a few moves. And you can start learning over time which opening moves/responses are good and which ones are not.