We finally have a strong and well organized opening course for White and one for Black. With these and the FREE beginner to master level playlist from this TH-cam channel, it’s all about consistency over an extended period of time 😎💪 ⬇ Course on Black Opening (Counterblow) www.chessable.com/ramirez Course on White Opening (First Strike) www.chessable.com/firststrike Free Playlist (beginner to master level) rb.gy/hw61wt All the Endgame Knowledge I have rb.gy/zels9y All the Strategy Knowledge I have rb.gy/g1iqro
Don't you ever ever think of deleting any of these videos, they're pure gold and worth watching at least twice each!! Excellent channel, I'm improving my chess bit by bit and it's always a pleasure watch you play.
They are Indeed a Treasure! I often download a handful if I will be on long flights or camping away from any communications. I can listen to one of these lessons, think it through and then in many cases work the new tactic into a puzzle or game. I am Very Grateful!
I started playing chess three months ago and because of your classes I was able to do three brilliant moves closely in arrow today and win by resignation. I am a 675 elo and opponent was 744 elo. Your lessons have sparkled my interest in chess so much more, before I couldn't properly understand want was going on now I'm thriving to improve my abilities every day because of you. Thank you!!!
I am glad you feel that way, Matthew. As you move through the course, you will see me lose more and more 😅 What matters is that we all learn something from these games. Nobody is immune to loosing in Chess 😎
Hi from Lagos. I've been following your videos. You are doing an amazing job. Your teaching is real and practical. Not some kind of edited videos where coach doesn't make mistakes. 👍👍
Thank you Rob for the amazing course!!! I also enjoy the weekly livestreams. The checkmate in the first game was on move 34. Qe8# tail mate. Awesome attack in the third game!
Thank you a lot! Your videos are really helpful, I appreciate your hard work. I will share your lessons to anyone I know who would like to learn to play chess
I started watching your channel from "King's Indian Defence" but then turned back to earlier videos (only skipped something for beginners). Now I'm on this video. Hope to see them all step by step, and increase the level of chess of course :)
Ha! Funny, I too hit the Kings Indian first, cherry picked three others and was so impressed that I decided to start all the way back at lesson #1. To be fair, I was surprised at the number of little nuance nuggets I have gleaned through those early lessons. The content, flow and presentation of these videos is unparalleled.
Great games! 3 0 is such a fast time control. In the second game, thought at move 48. Rf7+ Ke6 Re7+ to get the rooks off would be an interesting continuation
Great video as usual. Very instructive, I have to say that of the three sites I liked Lichess the most. Maybe because 1), I am very familiar with it, and 2) the last move is visible which seems unique to them. It helps a lot.
Great game. You could just play 5 or 10 min matches, that would give you more time to talk/explain. Even Naroditski went from 5 to 10 min matches so more time to teach comfortably. Well done Robert.
First of all, thanks for the incredible content, you are amazing ! You also have a very didactic approach in your videos, which is great ! A suggestion, why not start playing slightly longer games, 5/5 or even 15/10 - the time setting that is recommended to most beginners ? That would allow you to have more time to comment each move and not have to rush in the end when you are running out of time ? I have watched some of your videos and I often find you going mute towards the end game and when the clock is running out and just do your thing, which is a shame, we kinda miss all of the endgame ideas and subtleties. I would prefer 2* 10min matches with deep analysis than 5* 3min blitz games. I feel that blitz chess really comes with a way of playing and thinking that you would never do with more 'traditional' longer time control chess; not saying it's wrong but just that longer time control chess seem more relevant to me for beginners - like me btw :). cheers !
Hello! Thanks a lot for your feedback. You are totally right. I was using this time control to provide you with as many games as possible in one lesson, but a lot of you have mentioned how longer time control would be more beneficial and it makes sense. I am planning to do that the next time we have a lesson of this nature. Again, thank you for taking the time to let me know and please, feel free to do the same any time you see something that can be improved. I am sure there are many 😎
These videos are great. Thank you for your effort. It really is helpful. Thank you from Kazakhstan. I just have one question. Right now im rated around 1100. I wanna go up to 1600. I know its going to be very hard and that i must work hard, but what advice would you give to me?
Hello Beksultan! Thank you for your kind words. The main thing you should be doing now is training tactics. Make sure you cover the material from this videos in order. If you do not like to watch videos, you can cover this material from books. And that is something else. Read Chess books. In the description of this video, you will see a link to my book recommendations. I think you should start with # 1 and if you want another one, then the one about Magnus Carlsen. You might even find them for free somewhere. And of course, play lots of games 👍
Thank you! You will see many more as you continue through the course. You can also visit the playlist I created with all of the lessons where I just play games 👍
Hello Arvind! We will certainly have more lessons like that, but feel free to check out the playlist I created where I put together several lessons where I just play games as I explain the moves. Here is the link. Let me know if this is what you meant 👍 @t
@@arvindmehta6396 ah my bad! lol Here it is. Feel free to visit the channel to find other exercises under community tab and so on. th-cam.com/play/PLQKBpQZcRycqiEAXoaY6UB08RrtnIm8pV.html
Thanks for another great video, I'm going through all of them. In the last game I wondered how you would have dealt with the 'fried liver attack'. That one has cost me already many points. Do you have a video on that? (I Know the Luchini and Traxler, but they are quite risky too).
Hello! Since I played the Petrov, they could not use the fried liver 😎 I have not made a video in the fried liver, but in lesson # 51 you will learn an opening that will allow you to get to the middlegame without having to worry too much about those lines. Hope you enjoy it 👍
@@NMRobertRamirez I see, he took your pawn so it was a clear Russion defense. But If the pawn is not taken, I have ended up like this: 1 e4 e5 2 Nf3 Nf6 3 Bc4 Nxe4 4 Qe2 Nf6 5Ng5 or like this: 1 e4 e5, 2 Nf3 Nf6, 3 Bc4 Nxe4, 4.d3 Nd6 5.Ng5. Btw: your video on Pirc (#51) was the first video I saw from you. At the time I wasn't ready for it, but since then I've gone through video #1 tot #51 (today I reached #51 again). You've really improved my chess and my fun. My insight has grown with your transparent explanations about why certain moves make sense. E.g. Now I feel more confident playing the Pirc-defense as black and it works more and more often. Thanks! You're a great player, and certainly a great teacher.
Should I just play Pirc as black and white or should I add the london system into my repertoire? I'm around 1100 elo and I only play Pirc right now (200ish games). Should I buy the Pirc Defense book in the description? Thanks.
Hello! Excellent questions. So, let's talk about this... First, if you already know you like the Pirc, you should get the book. You will learn so much more about it. I am covering lines that I like, but you might. find other lines you like better in the book. Or even if you keep the same lines, you will learn a lot of Chess in general. That brings me to the first question you asked. You can play the Pirc set-up as white, but I recommended it more for you to really get the hang of the Pirc. With that said, I think that adding a different opening as white will help you expand your horizons and learn more Chess in general. It is recommended that players first get experience with king's pawn openings (1.e4) before moving to playing 1.d4 (I like the one from lesson # 32 and the one from lesson # 34), but if you already have that experience with 1.e4, the London is a good choice 👍 Hope this answers your questions!
Hello Coach, I hope you recognized me again. 😅 I have been playing chess in a disciplined way. But, there's one term that sparked my mind: 'Evaluation'. What actually is evaluation? Is it important to play chess? How to calculate evaluation? Please explain me, Coach.
Hello! Nice to see you on lesson # 48 already 👍 Evaluation is basically what we do before coming up with a plan. Just to give you an extremely simplistic example...let's say you get to a position and you want to do an evaluation (as you should). You will look at variable and constant factors such as king safety, pawn structure, piece activity and so on. Let's say that after your evaluation, you determine your opponent has a bad pawn structure, then you might come up with the plan to put pressure on their pawn structure or something consistent with your evaluation. It is not so simple, but we will talk more about it in detail soon. For now, it is not so important as you have so much more to learn, but it is good that you are getting familiarized with it 👏
Hello Mark! Thanks for your feedback. Today, I posted lesson # 69, which is about the Pirc Defense (I also made reference to the King's Indian Defense). These have been my two main openings for black my entire career. Next lesson, I will go over how to play vs the Austrian attack. Then, I will do a lesson like this one where I just play blitz using the Pirc. Stay tuned 👍
I didn’t see the checkmate in one move on the first game, but on move 31, instead of Qg6+, you could’ve gone with Qf7, followed by Ne6, which I think would guarantee you a checkmate with Qg7#. I don’t think the opponent’s queen could’ve been placed anywhere to prevent the checkmate once you protected the 7th rank with the your queen.
Hello Bruno! You are probably right. Do you think the opponent's queen could have gone to d8 and then g8 to protect g7? Thanks a lot for your feedback!
Hi Sir, your opponent at 22:30 didn't he make a mistake ? Cose if he had took with his white bishop on e8, he would have won a rook and would have put you in big trouble. Because then if you decided to take his queen he would just take your queen back, as his bishop is on the same diagnol than your your queen. So he could have been winning with a rook. Im I right ? Or i missed something. By the way, your tutorials are great and very helpful. Thanks to share your knowledge for free !
Hello! Thank you for your kind words. I am glad to know you are finding value in these lessons 👍 Regarding your question, if they had taken on e8, I had knight takes his queen with check (Nxd2+). So he did not have time to take my queen since their king is in trouble. Hope this makes sense!
@@NMRobertRamirez Oh yeah I didn't see it. Seems like I steel have a lot to learn. Thanks for your reply and I hope you'll continue making your videos. I've really got better thanks to them 👍
@@NMRobertRamirez jajaja. Así es. Cuando juegas y explicas haces ver el ajedrez fácil. Espero tener el privilegio de jugar algún día un par de partidas contigo. Soy EscobarCamilo en chess24, lichess y chess.com
At 17:52 he missed a skewer, when he could just move his queen to c1, to make check and when the King moves - to take your Queen. But he missed that =/
Hello Orkhan! That is true, but I could have moved my king close to my queen (to b7 or d7) to protect her. Please, let me know if this makes sense. Thanks a lot for your feedback 👍
No problem at all. We will surely go over more openings soon. I will provide you with everything you need to make it to master level and openings are a part of that. Stay tuned!
@@NMRobertRamirez yap found it...i was pausing a moment earlier and his king was on g8 so i thought he had h7......thank you for the fast replay and the great series :)
Everybody knows you really won that because you handicapped yourself by explaining which cost you time. I say thats like giving him a pawn or 2 handicap imho
We finally have a strong and well organized opening course for White and one for Black. With these and the FREE beginner to master level playlist from this TH-cam channel, it’s all about consistency over an extended period of time 😎💪 ⬇
Course on Black Opening (Counterblow) www.chessable.com/ramirez
Course on White Opening (First Strike) www.chessable.com/firststrike
Free Playlist (beginner to master level) rb.gy/hw61wt
All the Endgame Knowledge I have rb.gy/zels9y
All the Strategy Knowledge I have rb.gy/g1iqro
Don't you ever ever think of deleting any of these videos, they're pure gold and worth watching at least twice each!! Excellent channel, I'm improving my chess bit by bit and it's always a pleasure watch you play.
Thank you, Esteban! It's very rewarding to read comments like yours. And don't worry...these videos are not going anywhere 😎
Only twice? I think I've memorised some of these after watching them so frequently.
@NM Robert Ramirez I have downloaded them and if you delete them I will probably sell them on black market :D
They are Indeed a Treasure! I often download a handful if I will be on long flights or camping away from any communications. I can listen to one of these lessons, think it through and then in many cases work the new tactic into a puzzle or game.
I am Very Grateful!
Officially addicted to these videos lol. What an incredible series!
😎 I am so glad to hear! Stay tuned! We are not stopping any time soon 💪
in the first game , the checkmate in 1 move was after you take his queen with knight , Qe8#
I started playing chess three months ago and because of your classes I was able to do three brilliant moves closely in arrow today and win by resignation. I am a 675 elo and opponent was 744 elo. Your lessons have sparkled my interest in chess so much more, before I couldn't properly understand want was going on now I'm thriving to improve my abilities every day because of you. Thank you!!!
Well, for anyone wondering where the mate in 1 was, I think it was on move 34. Instead of playing Ne6+ the best move was Qe8#
H7 escape?
@@barskaracadag3923 the king was on f8 and his would be escape square, the g7 square was blocked by a pawn so it would be checkmate
As a beginner, I find that watching you play and explain the moves is very instructive! Thank you for your lessons, they are great :D
I am glad to hear that! Please feel free to ask any question you might have. I am happy to help!
I love that you show games where you make mistakes and even lose occasionally. It's very honest AND makes the games even more fun to watch!
I am glad you feel that way, Matthew. As you move through the course, you will see me lose more and more 😅 What matters is that we all learn something from these games. Nobody is immune to loosing in Chess 😎
you are an absolute teacher roboram !!
Hi from Lagos. I've been following your videos. You are doing an amazing job. Your teaching is real and practical. Not some kind of edited videos where coach doesn't make mistakes. 👍👍
Your a fantastic teacher robert. Absolutely love your channel
These explain the moves videos are great I am sure everybody agrees when ibsay please create these on a regular basis. Thanks Rob
Thank you, Darryl! We have many other videos like this one. Feel free to check out the entire playlist where I put them all together 👍💪
Thank you Rob for the amazing course!!! I also enjoy the weekly livestreams.
The checkmate in the first game was on move 34. Qe8# tail mate.
Awesome attack in the third game!
Best chess channel. Very understandable lessons!!!
Thank you! 👍
I have learned so much by watching your videos. Thank you for sharing!
It's great to see you around, Cristina! Keep it up 👍
Qe8 was the checkmate thanks for the great videos! Still having trouble with knight and bishop checkmate.
Nothing like watching you play and explain. Of course way above my level but so much fun. Do you have a lesson on the Petrov Defense ? Thanks again
Thank you, Luc! And yes, lesson # 35 is a brief introduction to the Petrov Defense. Hope you like it 👍
Thank you a lot! Your videos are really helpful, I appreciate your hard work. I will share your lessons to anyone I know who would like to learn to play chess
It is my pleasure, Ahliddin! Glad you found value in it 👍
I started watching your channel from "King's Indian Defence" but then turned back to earlier videos (only skipped something for beginners). Now I'm on this video. Hope to see them all step by step, and increase the level of chess of course :)
same
Ha! Funny, I too hit the Kings Indian first, cherry picked three others and was so impressed that I decided to start all the way back at lesson #1. To be fair, I was surprised at the number of little nuance nuggets I have gleaned through those early lessons. The content, flow and presentation of these videos is unparalleled.
I love watching you play...I can compare my decisions about the next moves with yours...thank you again for teaching us a good chess !!!
You are welcome as usual, Dan. Nice to see you around 👍
Great games! 3 0 is such a fast time control.
In the second game, thought at move 48. Rf7+ Ke6 Re7+ to get the rooks off would be an interesting continuation
Hey Michael! You are totally right! That's easily winning with the extra passed pawn and no rooks. I did not even think of it. Great catch!
that's a really nice move actually, wins the game on the spot
These videos are really helping me out! Climbed up to 1220. I love the game of chess
That's great to know, Krum! Keep training. The more you learn the more you enjoy and appreciate Chess.
Robert, you are an excellent explainer of the game!
Thank you, Tom! 🙌
I LOVE this format! Keep it up please!
love it i add it on my playlist all game that you play and explain plzzz add another and thnxxxxxx again
loving the videos sir great fan of yours
Great video as usual. Very instructive,
I have to say that of the three sites I liked Lichess the most. Maybe because 1), I am very familiar with it, and 2) the last move is visible which seems unique to them. It helps a lot.
You make this look easy 😅
thanks coach
Great game. You could just play 5 or 10 min matches, that would give you more time to talk/explain. Even Naroditski went from 5 to 10 min matches so more time to teach comfortably. Well done Robert.
Thank you! And yes, you are totally right. That's why I did something different in lesson # 94 after listening to your feedback 👍
First of all, thanks for the incredible content, you are amazing ! You also have a very didactic approach in your videos, which is great !
A suggestion, why not start playing slightly longer games, 5/5 or even 15/10 - the time setting that is recommended to most beginners ? That would allow you to have more time to comment each move and not have to rush in the end when you are running out of time ?
I have watched some of your videos and I often find you going mute towards the end game and when the clock is running out and just do your thing, which is a shame, we kinda miss all of the endgame ideas and subtleties. I would prefer 2* 10min matches with deep analysis than 5* 3min blitz games. I feel that blitz chess really comes with a way of playing and thinking that you would never do with more 'traditional' longer time control chess; not saying it's wrong but just that longer time control chess seem more relevant to me for beginners - like me btw :).
cheers !
Hello! Thanks a lot for your feedback. You are totally right. I was using this time control to provide you with as many games as possible in one lesson, but a lot of you have mentioned how longer time control would be more beneficial and it makes sense. I am planning to do that the next time we have a lesson of this nature. Again, thank you for taking the time to let me know and please, feel free to do the same any time you see something that can be improved. I am sure there are many 😎
You are clearly the best chess teacher EVER
🙌
Dear Coach,
I don't know how to thank you. But I will let you know you are the best coach eveeerrrr!! :)
I appreciate a lot these videos!
Thank u
These videos are great. Thank you for your effort. It really is helpful. Thank you from Kazakhstan. I just have one question. Right now im rated around 1100. I wanna go up to 1600. I know its going to be very hard and that i must work hard, but what advice would you give to me?
Hello Beksultan! Thank you for your kind words. The main thing you should be doing now is training tactics. Make sure you cover the material from this videos in order. If you do not like to watch videos, you can cover this material from books. And that is something else. Read Chess books. In the description of this video, you will see a link to my book recommendations. I think you should start with # 1 and if you want another one, then the one about Magnus Carlsen. You might even find them for free somewhere. And of course, play lots of games 👍
@@NMRobertRamirez Thank you very much)
How fantastic you play!!! 👍
19:28, I think Bxa2 is a good move. By the way, thank you for your lessons.
Hello Alex! You are more than welcome. I think I was concerned about b3, trapping the bishop and followed by Kb2 and Kxa2.
Nice Video..Keep posting such speedrun games.
Thank you! You will see many more as you continue through the course. You can also visit the playlist I created with all of the lessons where I just play games 👍
34. Qe8# missed checkmate
7:10 Queen to E8 :) found it
Nice! 💪
@@NMRobertRamirez thank you, also for the time and effort in your lessons, very enjoyable!
I have one doubt...While playing a game with a timer of less then 3 min,Then,Is time really important while making moves?
Please start a series of videos where you play and explain each moves and thanks for these videos
Hello Arvind! We will certainly have more lessons like that, but feel free to check out the playlist I created where I put together several lessons where I just play games as I explain the moves. Here is the link. Let me know if this is what you meant 👍 @t
@@NMRobertRamirez you forgot to mention link 🤔
@@arvindmehta6396 ah my bad! lol Here it is. Feel free to visit the channel to find other exercises under community tab and so on. th-cam.com/play/PLQKBpQZcRycqiEAXoaY6UB08RrtnIm8pV.html
In the second game when your opponent played Re5 in the rook endgame I noticed you had Rf7+ Ke6 Re7+ Kxe7 Kxe5 and the pawn endgame should be winning
Thanks for another great video, I'm going through all of them. In the last game I wondered how you would have dealt with the 'fried liver attack'. That one has cost me already many points. Do you have a video on that? (I Know the Luchini and Traxler, but they are quite risky too).
Hello! Since I played the Petrov, they could not use the fried liver 😎 I have not made a video in the fried liver, but in lesson # 51 you will learn an opening that will allow you to get to the middlegame without having to worry too much about those lines. Hope you enjoy it 👍
@@NMRobertRamirez I see, he took your pawn so it was a clear Russion defense. But If the pawn is not taken, I have ended up like this:
1 e4 e5 2 Nf3 Nf6 3 Bc4 Nxe4 4 Qe2 Nf6 5Ng5 or like this: 1 e4 e5, 2 Nf3 Nf6, 3 Bc4 Nxe4, 4.d3 Nd6 5.Ng5.
Btw: your video on Pirc (#51) was the first video I saw from you. At the time I wasn't ready for it, but since then I've gone through video #1 tot #51 (today I reached #51 again). You've really improved my chess and my fun. My insight has grown with your transparent explanations about why certain moves make sense. E.g. Now I feel more confident playing the Pirc-defense as black and it works more and more often. Thanks! You're a great player, and certainly a great teacher.
Should I just play Pirc as black and white or should I add the london system into my repertoire? I'm around 1100 elo and I only play Pirc right now (200ish games). Should I buy the Pirc Defense book in the description? Thanks.
Hello! Excellent questions. So, let's talk about this...
First, if you already know you like the Pirc, you should get the book. You will learn so much more about it. I am covering lines that I like, but you might. find other lines you like better in the book. Or even if you keep the same lines, you will learn a lot of Chess in general.
That brings me to the first question you asked. You can play the Pirc set-up as white, but I recommended it more for you to really get the hang of the Pirc. With that said, I think that adding a different opening as white will help you expand your horizons and learn more Chess in general. It is recommended that players first get experience with king's pawn openings (1.e4) before moving to playing 1.d4 (I like the one from lesson # 32 and the one from lesson # 34), but if you already have that experience with 1.e4, the London is a good choice 👍
Hope this answers your questions!
@@NMRobertRamirez Yes, you gave me everything I was looking for. Thank you!
I made a coffee before pressing play button, and I didn't drink a drop till the end, it was hypnotizing :D
😎💪 hope you learn something 👍
Hello Coach, I hope you recognized me again. 😅
I have been playing chess in a disciplined way. But, there's one term that sparked my mind: 'Evaluation'.
What actually is evaluation? Is it important to play chess? How to calculate evaluation?
Please explain me, Coach.
Hello! Nice to see you on lesson # 48 already 👍 Evaluation is basically what we do before coming up with a plan. Just to give you an extremely simplistic example...let's say you get to a position and you want to do an evaluation (as you should). You will look at variable and constant factors such as king safety, pawn structure, piece activity and so on. Let's say that after your evaluation, you determine your opponent has a bad pawn structure, then you might come up with the plan to put pressure on their pawn structure or something consistent with your evaluation.
It is not so simple, but we will talk more about it in detail soon. For now, it is not so important as you have so much more to learn, but it is good that you are getting familiarized with it 👏
@@NMRobertRamirez thanks coach, I have not fully cleared the concept, but I understood what you said 😅
@@noone.4981 little by little 👍
On your first game, how come you did not get 2 seconds bonus per move?
Hello Alex! I think I did, but I played too slow 🤓
@@NMRobertRamirez You absolutely did not. Buggy website.
@@loveboat true and very annoying it was 3/0
4:28 doesn't Be6 blunder a pawn after Nxe5 Bxb4 Nxc6 bxc6 cxb3?
Nice! Can you please play kings Indian defence vs Austrian ?
Hello Mark! Thanks for your feedback. Today, I posted lesson # 69, which is about the Pirc Defense (I also made reference to the King's Indian Defense). These have been my two main openings for black my entire career. Next lesson, I will go over how to play vs the Austrian attack. Then, I will do a lesson like this one where I just play blitz using the Pirc. Stay tuned 👍
Props to Robert for trying to explain a 2400 game in under 6 minutes 😂
I didn’t see the checkmate in one move on the first game, but on move 31, instead of Qg6+, you could’ve gone with Qf7, followed by Ne6, which I think would guarantee you a checkmate with Qg7#. I don’t think the opponent’s queen could’ve been placed anywhere to prevent the checkmate once you protected the 7th rank with the your queen.
Oh. Never mind. exNf4 if you did what I said above. Missed that tiny detail.
Hello Bruno! You are probably right. Do you think the opponent's queen could have gone to d8 and then g8 to protect g7? Thanks a lot for your feedback!
@@NMRobertRamirez Yes, you’re right. But now I did see the missed mate once I rewatched it. Move 34, Qe8#.
@@brunoareastoledo Excellent!
nice game play
Thank you!
At 20:10 you took knight with queen (instead of the knight). Was that to have a better position for the queen?
You are correct! I want it to accomplish both improving my queen and leaving my knight on an active square.
Hi Sir, your opponent at 22:30 didn't he make a mistake ? Cose if he had took with his white bishop on e8, he would have won a rook and would have put you in big trouble. Because then if you decided to take his queen he would just take your queen back, as his bishop is on the same diagnol than your your queen. So he could have been winning with a rook. Im I right ? Or i missed something.
By the way, your tutorials are great and very helpful. Thanks to share your knowledge for free !
Hello! Thank you for your kind words. I am glad to know you are finding value in these lessons 👍 Regarding your question, if they had taken on e8, I had knight takes his queen with check (Nxd2+). So he did not have time to take my queen since their king is in trouble. Hope this makes sense!
@@NMRobertRamirez Oh yeah I didn't see it. Seems like I steel have a lot to learn. Thanks for your reply and I hope you'll continue making your videos. I've really got better thanks to them 👍
@@mwmadeserte9119 we all have a lot to learn. Chess is a never ending story 🤓
@@NMRobertRamirez 🙏
At 7:10 queen e8 checkmate
💪😎
In the last game white could have played Qd3 instead of Qd5
at 7:09
isnt Qe8 a checkmate??
this is because after the game the site said you missed a mate in 1 so i tried to find it
Yes! Glad to see you found it. I put the sign in the video to see if anyone had seen it or could find it afterwards. Good job as usual, Aryan!
@@NMRobertRamirez hehe thanks 💪💪💪
first game Qe8 checkmate after taking enemy queen with nxc7
Excellent! 👍💪
Muy buen video. No entiendo como perdiste la primera partida por tiempo si estabas jugando con incremento. Algo raro pasó allí.
Si, se sintió raro pero pudo ser que me travé un poco con el mouse. Igual me lo merecia por no ver el mate en 1 😅
@@NMRobertRamirez jajaja. Así es. Cuando juegas y explicas haces ver el ajedrez fácil. Espero tener el privilegio de jugar algún día un par de partidas contigo. Soy EscobarCamilo en chess24, lichess y chess.com
Seria un placer. Yo mayormente juego en chess.com. Puedes enviarme una solicitud a RobRam y si algún dia estamos libre, jugamos.
What happened to the 2 second increment in the 1st game?
I think I fell asleep 😅
At 17:52 he missed a skewer, when he could just move his queen to c1, to make check and when the King moves - to take your Queen. But he missed that =/
Hello Orkhan! That is true, but I could have moved my king close to my queen (to b7 or d7) to protect her. Please, let me know if this makes sense. Thanks a lot for your feedback 👍
@@NMRobertRamirez yes, that is also true! Thanks for your quick responses! Please do more openings videos. Really would love to learn more of them!
No problem at all. We will surely go over more openings soon. I will provide you with everything you need to make it to master level and openings are a part of that. Stay tuned!
Great video! P.S I am US Coin World this is my chess channel!
when i think of strategies deep in the game i always ran out of time
Perfect reason I don't like bullet/blitz chess. You're not really playing for material or checkmate you're playing for a clock and time.
Good point! 👍
i can't see the missed check mate in game 1 can you help?
Hey Shady! Of course. Pause the video at 07:10 after he moved his king to f8. At that moment there is mate in 1. Please let me know if you see it.
@@NMRobertRamirez yap found it...i was pausing a moment earlier and his king was on g8 so i thought he had h7......thank you for the fast replay and the great series :)
@@shadyemad9676 You are welcome. Anything I can do to help :)
In the first game #Qe8 you missed ;)
Hello! At what time in the video?
@@NMRobertRamirez 7:09 instead of checking with Knight #Qe8
Hey compa........ what about chess Universe
🤔
probably use 10 mins games so we can learn more
Isn't 3 minutes too short for comments?
Hi!
Hey! Thanks for checking out the channel. Hope you find it helpful!
@@NMRobertRamirez No problem!
👍
23/10/21
8:23 AM
Everybody knows you really won that because you handicapped yourself by explaining which cost you time. I say thats like giving him a pawn or 2 handicap imho
Nive wins.
Thank you!