Nothing better than waking up and finding four new videos from The Climb series all at once hahaha! 🥳 ... Quick tip: If you're already up a queen, the best thing to do is start trading everything. I know it might seem like rushing the checkmate is better, but trust me, the fewer pieces there are, the easier it will be. So don’t hesitate to take everything when you have extra material, trade those bishops for knights without fear!💪
It's natural to want to check the king, chase it down, but the queen can't do it alone. A focus on piece development with tempo might have been a better instinct. Probs you going to need at least 3 pieces to get a checkmate after all, with his king in the middle just look for chances to develop with tempo. Probably I'd have considered Nf6 above f4, get's you another attacking piece & also f4 blocked in the bishop. Normal rules of seizing the center, & freeing up your pieces still count too, e4 would not doubt have felt slow, but to give both bishops access to the diagonals it would have probably been worth it at some point. Anyway good game, calculation, experimentation, you are clearly getting stronger.
@@andreureigduart7063 most of us don't stream ourselves at the start of our journey & I'm sure we'd all be surprised at some of our choices if we could see our first games. Her rating is going and progress should be celebrated. I think you should be more realistic and less critical.
It's so cute watching her play and hearing her use all the chess terminology. She's trying so hard. I'm 1300, she'll probably be crushing me in 6 months.
hey you’ve added a community post recently about youtube guidelines stopping you from live-streaming, but you turned off comments for that post lol. Anyway i’d recommend you check any strikes you might have received on your account and try to rectify them. Hopefully it gets sorted soon
At 0:11 are heard the words, "So this guy is doing a Queen's Pawn opening. I don't really know how to do that." With any opening by white involving pushing a queenside pawn on move 1 forward by 2 squares, whether that 2-square queenside pawn move by white on move 1 is 1. a4 or 1. b4 or 1. c4 or 1. d4, two things are going on: 1. White could be plotting some really powerful attack on the queenside, meaning that black should make preparations to be able to castle black's king in a direction away from that potentially powerful queenside attack on or before move 16. 2. Such an attack by white on the queenside is weaker if white cannot successfully push the white king's pawn to e4. Black of course would prefer that white have a weakened attack rather than a strong attack, so black will want a great move that makes it hard for white to make a subsequent pawn push to e4. There are two good moves by black that make white's subsequent pawn push to e4 highly difficult, 1... d5 and 1... Nf6, leading to a question: Which move is better for black to make? 1... d5 at least works from the point of view of making white's pawn push to e4 more difficult. For example, when on move 1 white moves out the queen's bishop pawn by 2 squares, then 1. c4 d5 is known as the Anglo-Indian Defence. The Anglo-Indian Defence works fairly well. However, the black knight move of 1... Nf6 does the job too of making white's pawn push to e4 more difficult, and also is better move due to a 1200 elo "king safety" aspect that is not provided by the black pawn move of 1... d5. With the pawn move, the black king is still 4 moves away from castling to the kingside, in the direction away from what might turn out to be an especially strong queenside attack by white. With the knight move, the black king is only 3 moves away from castling, and the main job still gets done of making it hard for white to make a successful pawn push to e4. 1. c4 Nf6 The same concept applies to the Queen's Pawn opening. The knight move by black brings with it just that little bit of 1200 elo aspect of extra "king safety" for black. 1. d4 Nf6 Short version: If white on turn 1 moves any queenside pawn 2 squares forward, the best 1st move for black is 1... Nf6, for the sake of a little bit of extra king safety for black. Black, with that move of the king's knight, then is 1 move closer to being able to castle kingside than if black instead plays the queen's pawn move of 1... d5. Either move by black is about equally good for making a succesful subsequent white pawn push to e4 more difficult for white, but the knight move of 1... Nf6 adds just that little bit of 1200 elo level "king safety" thinking. That black knight move of 1... Nf6 is what the World Chess Champion plays in that situation of white pushing the queen's pawn 2 squares forward on move 1, and some people will simply memorize and play 1... Nf6 just because that's what the World Chess Champion plays in that situation, but it is better to know why a move is played rather than simply playing a knight move just because that's what the World Chess Champion does. The knight move by black brings with it just that little bit of extra king safety for black on turn 1 that doesn't happen with the queen's pawn move by black on turn 1. The best answer then for black is 1. (a4 or b4 or c4 or d4) Nf6 What white then does on turn 2 is up to white, and black then has to make a tactical choice on what to do on move 2, but as long as move 1 by black is good, black then has one or more good tactical choices for move 2.
At 4:40 a theme of chess was accidentally demonstrated, that it is usually better to "Take with the lower value chessman." A queen is worth 9 points, and a bishop is worth 2 2/3 points, making the bishop a lower value chessman than a queen. An trade of a bishop for a bishop is a good trade when you are 9 points ahead. If you trade a queen for a bishop though, you lose 7 1/3 points (9 points for your higher value queen minus 2 2/3 points for your opponent's lower value bishop = 7 1/3 points) that get subtracted out of your previous 9 point advantage with such a trade. Short version: When you have a choice of 2 or more chessman to make a capture with, exercise some extra care if considering taking with a higher value chessman instead of a lower value chessman. Sometimes, taking with the higher value chessman is the right thing to do, but in most cases, the conventional approach of taking with the lower value chessman is the better approach.
You should learn one opening and stick with it for now. It will help you get your pieces out quickly every game. Probably the Italian would be good for you right now.
Bs. I go by what Danya said, don't even look into any opening theory until you're at least 1300 because that'd be your next stage of development when learning chess.
@@scienceevolves4417 I'm under 1000 too, it really helps. I really only do the London as white and Pirc as black. You don't have to learn the main lines but just knowing the openings gives good positions.
@@scienceevolves4417 It's not so much the theory but just the openings so develop all your pieces. I'm not 1000 either but it really helps so that you can co-ordinate pieces and put them on good squares. I only use the London black and Pirc as black.
Nothing better than waking up and finding four new videos from The Climb series all at once hahaha! 🥳 ... Quick tip: If you're already up a queen, the best thing to do is start trading everything. I know it might seem like rushing the checkmate is better, but trust me, the fewer pieces there are, the easier it will be. So don’t hesitate to take everything when you have extra material, trade those bishops for knights without fear!💪
It's natural to want to check the king, chase it down, but the queen can't do it alone. A focus on piece development with tempo might have been a better instinct. Probs you going to need at least 3 pieces to get a checkmate after all, with his king in the middle just look for chances to develop with tempo. Probably I'd have considered Nf6 above f4, get's you another attacking piece & also f4 blocked in the bishop. Normal rules of seizing the center, & freeing up your pieces still count too, e4 would not doubt have felt slow, but to give both bishops access to the diagonals it would have probably been worth it at some point. Anyway good game, calculation, experimentation, you are clearly getting stronger.
She's literally the worst player of the world. What r u talkin about? She literally hangs all pieces and u think is a good game?
@@andreureigduart7063 most of us don't stream ourselves at the start of our journey & I'm sure we'd all be surprised at some of our choices if we could see our first games. Her rating is going and progress should be celebrated. I think you should be more realistic and less critical.
Loved the scripture at the end 🙏
GM Aman Hambleton has a nice chess series called Building Habits that you might appreciate. Keep growing!
I am 500 elo and it’s helped me a lot thanks
Triple fork=tork
torq = turning effect of force🤓
It's so cute watching her play and hearing her use all the chess terminology. She's trying so hard. I'm 1300, she'll probably be crushing me in 6 months.
That queen sacrifice!!
😅😅😅😅😊😊😊😊
This channel will blossom into something beautiful
Keep up the grind girlie! You'll get there!
one day its finna be "road to 2400 ELO"
Why is this so adorable
Enjoying the series. Also a beginner player trying to learn from others and go up the ladder too.😂
There will always come a time when you get stuck. I got stuck in 300s elo and now i am stuck in 500s but i will break away from it soon.
4:40 the moment when you realised you blundered:
Even without the Rook, it wasn't a Mate
It's 400 elo, cut her some slack lol😂
✝️❤
🙌🏽🙌🏽🙌🏽🙌🏽
hey you’ve added a community post recently about youtube guidelines stopping you from live-streaming, but you turned off comments for that post lol. Anyway i’d recommend you check any strikes you might have received on your account and try to rectify them. Hopefully it gets sorted soon
@@SkogenWhisper I do not have any strikes, it may have been the age restriction?
❤
W channel
At 0:11 are heard the words, "So this guy is doing a Queen's Pawn opening. I don't really know how to do that."
With any opening by white involving pushing a queenside pawn on move 1 forward by 2 squares, whether that 2-square queenside pawn move by white on move 1 is 1. a4 or 1. b4 or 1. c4 or 1. d4, two things are going on:
1. White could be plotting some really powerful attack on the queenside, meaning that black should make preparations to be able to castle black's king in a direction away from that potentially powerful queenside attack on or before move 16.
2. Such an attack by white on the queenside is weaker if white cannot successfully push the white king's pawn to e4. Black of course would prefer that white have a weakened attack rather than a strong attack, so black will want a great move that makes it hard for white to make a subsequent pawn push to e4.
There are two good moves by black that make white's subsequent pawn push to e4 highly difficult, 1... d5 and 1... Nf6, leading to a question: Which move is better for black to make?
1... d5 at least works from the point of view of making white's pawn push to e4 more difficult.
For example, when on move 1 white moves out the queen's bishop pawn by 2 squares, then
1. c4 d5
is known as the Anglo-Indian Defence. The Anglo-Indian Defence works fairly well.
However, the black knight move of 1... Nf6 does the job too of making white's pawn push to e4 more difficult, and also is better move due to a 1200 elo "king safety" aspect that is not provided by the black pawn move of 1... d5.
With the pawn move, the black king is still 4 moves away from castling to the kingside, in the direction away from what might turn out to be an especially strong queenside attack by white. With the knight move, the black king is only 3 moves away from castling, and the main job still gets done of making it hard for white to make a successful pawn push to e4.
1. c4 Nf6
The same concept applies to the Queen's Pawn opening. The knight move by black brings with it just that little bit of 1200 elo aspect of extra "king safety" for black.
1. d4 Nf6
Short version: If white on turn 1 moves any queenside pawn 2 squares forward, the best 1st move for black is 1... Nf6, for the sake of a little bit of extra king safety for black. Black, with that move of the king's knight, then is 1 move closer to being able to castle kingside than if black instead plays the queen's pawn move of 1... d5. Either move by black is about equally good for making a succesful subsequent white pawn push to e4 more difficult for white, but the knight move of 1... Nf6 adds just that little bit of 1200 elo level "king safety" thinking.
That black knight move of 1... Nf6 is what the World Chess Champion plays in that situation of white pushing the queen's pawn 2 squares forward on move 1, and some people will simply memorize and play 1... Nf6 just because that's what the World Chess Champion plays in that situation, but it is better to know why a move is played rather than simply playing a knight move just because that's what the World Chess Champion does. The knight move by black brings with it just that little bit of extra king safety for black on turn 1 that doesn't happen with the queen's pawn move by black on turn 1.
The best answer then for black is
1. (a4 or b4 or c4 or d4) Nf6
What white then does on turn 2 is up to white, and black then has to make a tactical choice on what to do on move 2, but as long as move 1 by black is good, black then has one or more good tactical choices for move 2.
At 4:40 a theme of chess was accidentally demonstrated, that it is usually better to "Take with the lower value chessman."
A queen is worth 9 points, and a bishop is worth 2 2/3 points, making the bishop a lower value chessman than a queen.
An trade of a bishop for a bishop is a good trade when you are 9 points ahead. If you trade a queen for a bishop though, you lose 7 1/3 points (9 points for your higher value queen minus 2 2/3 points for your opponent's lower value bishop = 7 1/3 points) that get subtracted out of your previous 9 point advantage with such a trade.
Short version: When you have a choice of 2 or more chessman to make a capture with, exercise some extra care if considering taking with a higher value chessman instead of a lower value chessman.
Sometimes, taking with the higher value chessman is the right thing to do, but in most cases, the conventional approach of taking with the lower value chessman is the better approach.
Hello seashore sry I was like gone for so long I was preparing for my board exams which starts from 15th of Feb. Will try to keep up with your vids
GL
Why you 400?
Approaching 500😊
하찮고 귀엽다 ㅋㅋ
You should learn one opening and stick with it for now. It will help you get your pieces out quickly every game. Probably the Italian would be good for you right now.
On that level you don’t need openings just the basics of chess , how to develop you pieces correctly , response to the threats , make a plane .
Bs. I go by what Danya said, don't even look into any opening theory until you're at least 1300 because that'd be your next stage of development when learning chess.
You can get up to 1500 with no theory , only the opening principles.
An answer to your community post. You might not be able to livestream anymore because of the age restriction. Unless you got a copyright strike.
@@isaacc7304 How do I fix that?
Eat the Queen and it is GG's
Well it didn't exactly go like that however her opponent had some talent to give away Q in under 5 moves.😊
Thy hair is looking particularly puffy, yet merry today!
Hot as always
what are you talking about 😂
@ Ayo bro tryna bag up a minor
Ju Wenjun ......???
Threerk
Please play with your subscribers as well who are lower or similar Elo to you can play ranked or unranked on livestream
8:26 Re2 and you win free rook 😊
Im 450 in rapid im learning chess
@@Skibidi_DOMINIKno then king f1
How ? She have Bishop on c5 (rook e2 Black got check And you take rook)@@sohammitra8315
You should definitely learn a couple of openings.
No. I'm well under 1000 and couldn't benefit from any opening theory. Not ready for it yet.
@@scienceevolves4417 I'm under 1000 too, it really helps. I really only do the London as white and Pirc as black. You don't have to learn the main lines but just knowing the openings gives good positions.
@@scienceevolves4417 It's not so much the theory but just the openings so develop all your pieces. I'm not 1000 either but it really helps so that you can co-ordinate pieces and put them on good squares. I only use the London black and Pirc as black.
you so cute 🤩
Shes a kid...
Its a royal fork