🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation: 00:00 *🏞️ Fundamental Chess Principles* - Mastering the fundamentals is crucial for chess players. - Key principles include controlling the center, playing with all pieces, and ensuring king safety. 02:12 *🏰 Controlling the Center* - Controlling the center squares (e4, d4, e5, d5) is vital for piece activity and strength. - Placing pawns on e4 or d4 at the start helps establish central control and sets the tone for the game. 03:59 *🎭 Developing All Pieces* - Players should bring all pieces into the game gradually, starting with minor pieces (knights and bishops). - Avoid overextending pawns in the opening to allow smooth piece development. 07:03 *🎯 Queen Placement and Vulnerability* - Bringing out the queen too early can lead to vulnerability and tactical disadvantages. - Understanding the vulnerabilities of the f2/f7 squares is crucial for avoiding traps and checkmates. 11:54 *⚔️ Tactics for Material Gain* - Leveraging tactics like forks can lead to material advantages, even if initially behind. - Simplifying the position through piece trades can mitigate material deficits and increase winning chances. 13:42 *🏰 King Safety and Castling* - Castling is essential for king safety, also bringing the rooks into the game effectively. - Avoid pushing pawns in front of the king unnecessarily, except for creating a space for the king in specific scenarios. 19:01 *🏰 Importance of Pawn Management* - Pawns should only be pushed when necessary, as they cannot move backwards. - Pushing pawns too eagerly can weaken positions and leave vulnerabilities. - Evaluating pawn moves in terms of piece development and board control is crucial. 22:14 *🧩 Improving Piece Activity* - Once basic principles like development and central control are achieved, focus on improving the least active pieces. - Doubling rooks on open files can increase their influence and put pressure on opponent's weaknesses. - Maneuvering knights to more active squares can enhance their effectiveness in the game. 27:17 *⚔️ Capturing Free Pieces* - Exploiting opponent's blunders and capturing free pieces is crucial for gaining material advantage. - Identifying and seizing opportunities to capture undefended pieces can significantly impact the game's outcome. - Leveraging opponent's mistakes to secure material gains sets the stage for a winning endgame. 30:33 *🏆 Endgame Techniques: Staircase and Box Methods* - Staircase method involves systematically trapping the opponent's king using coordinated queen and rook movements. - Box method, applicable when having only one major piece, focuses on gradually confining the opponent's king to a corner or edge of the board. - Mastering these endgame techniques enhances the ability to secure checkmate and win games decisively. 37:14 *🏰 Endgame Checkmate Techniques* - Techniques for trapping the opponent's king in the endgame to achieve checkmate. - Utilizing the "box method" to gradually confine the opponent's king to a corner or edge of the board. - Demonstrating the application of the "staircase method" to systematically restrict the opponent's king's movements until checkmate is achieved. 38:42 *💥 Midgame Checkmate Strategies* - Importance of delivering checkmates in the middle game to secure victories. - Highlighting the "kiss of death" checkmate pattern involving the queen's alignment with another piece to trap the opponent's king. - Emphasizing the value of practicing checkmate patterns through chess puzzles to enhance tactical skills. Made with HARPA AI
Great presentation! You did a wonderful job in explaining things, and you made it look to easy. Great job, wonderful points and easy to remember. Thank you.
I actually learned quite a bit here. See I've been trying out specific openings, but chess is situational. It's good to learn these openings but, I'd say, the most important thing is just to play. Thank you for helping me understand that, seriously, thank you.
I recently started playing chess, and in last 6-7 months I've watched soooo many videos on it, and none were as good as this for a beginner. (Like, I knew most of what was shown in this video, but only because bits and pieces were in those many videos I watched.) Thank you for this video. This is gonna be saved and I will be rewatching it till it's deeply routed in me.
Watching this at early morning 4:00 A.M from India. This video is so engrossing. One Particular thing i liked so much is the Logic you explain behind the moves[ Ex: During early Queen attack Knight move is good because Knight is protected by Queen,if Queen Takes knight our queen can take their Queen]. This kind of minor details helps me to understand clearly. One Request: I am a Beginner, I usually start Good , but loose My Plot in Middle games and End up Resigning most of the times. Do you have any Videos to learn and Improve Middle games /How to have a strategy or approach for middle Games ? Any Help Would be Appreciated 👍🏻
Thanks so much for these examples and explanations. I started getting interested in chess recently, and whilst thinking I knew a lot of these tips already, it's fantastic to see the actual importance of certain moves and decisions. You know how to give the right explanation and I'm eager to implement some of these new things into my games. Currently I'm 830 Elo. It's... I often know what to do, but my biggest problem is sometimes forgetting or overlooking what pieces protect other pieces. So right after I make a move, I realise I blundered something due to forgetfulness haha. 800 Elo is enough to know however, that the Rook was defended by a Bishop, and not a Pawn at the end ;) Thanks alot! Cheers!
Yes. She is explaining the improvement of the knight and not tactics in that particular position, so, in a game that knight improvement could wait that capture.
I know its the normal advice to counter e4 with e5 and d4 with d5 but as I've been getting my kids ready for their first tournament, I feel like its a bad way to go. There are just too many tricky openings for that position. The King's Gambit, the Scotch Gambit, etc. The advice I'm giving them is to never counter their opponent's opening with a mirror move. Just with that advice, my 7-year-old daughter has already figured out her own version of the Scandinavian Defense and she's had pretty good luck with it.
Freestyle Fischer 960 chess has taught me recently how bad things can get if you go for center control right away. Sometimes you have to draw the head before the circle.
If you move both pawns to center in the beginning the opponent can check you and gain great momentum and tempo on you in the beginning. You would have to know some amazing tactics to get out of it or block. Am I right?
Most of the time those queen/bishop checks can be blocked with a minor piece which actually helps your development. They're only dangerous if your opponent has a concrete tactic, like a double attack with a queen check on the open diagonal. Moving the f-pawn is much more dangerous cause no minor piece can block.
@@spookyfox3716 That's exactly what I'm talking about, the great tactic of that starts with the Check because you moved both pawns to center in first 2 moves. You will get destroyed in online Chess doing this unless you're a GM.
Some of my most crushing tactical victories has come for 1.D4 for so i think that's it's important to also clarify that you get all types of different positions in 1. d4, not just a closed KID
Dear Alessia, I have been learning and following your channel for a very long time and I have improved a lot with chess. Reason I want to send this message is that I have recently been defeated by an apponenent stronger than me. I want to share the lines. I am playing White E4 D5 (Whish you really hate :) EXD5 F6 - I took the pawn Night c3 i defended with night c3 e6 played by black i took the pawn Dxe6 White played bishop XE6 and took my pawn I played night F3 Black played Bishop D6 I played pawn to D4 Black pawn H6 I played pawn H3 Black castled I played bishop to D3 black - night to c6 I castled --- TRAPED here Alessia :( Black Queen to D7 I played night E3 white bishop took my pawn xh3 then I took the night gxh3 Queen took my pawn xh3 I moved mu rook to E1 (trying to give some space to king) black Night to G4 I played king to E2 White checked me with black bishop H2 + I took with my night Xh2 Queen took the night Xh2 with a check I moved my king to F1 then White queen H1 MATEED :(
Did you know what is the funniest part of the Chess game?! When the english translators were naming the chess pieces from persian, they put the word "VAZIR" which means "Counselor" or "Iranian first minister" to the: queen! The problem is: when a soldier reaches the last row of the chessboard, he can become a Counselor (VAZIR). Even if all eight soldiers reach the final line, they can become Counselor (VAZIR). What happened now: They have changed the king's advisor to the king's wife, and if any soldier reaches the last row of the chess, the king gets a new wife 🤣🤣🤣 So embarrassing! Khosrow
The increasing popularity of chess is amazing. However one must ask why there is only two out of the top 50 chess players being women? Maybe the numbers are incorrect however in this time of opportunity and equality of access you would think this statistic would change or are the vast resources of women still not concerning themselves with such challenges.
Could you please 1) teach us end of the game with rook's tactics 2) how could win with out queen against to player 3) do daily makes videos of explain magnus , Kasparov,karpov, Michael,paulmorphy,anandh, please explain mam i beg your leg mam and i bow my head in front of you because you are a well known person how to teach according to our knowledge thank you so much finally i love your game but not you finally you are beautiful angel
Get 10% OFF with code ALESSIA10 ➡tinyurl.com/BeginnerChessMastery
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
00:00 *🏞️ Fundamental Chess Principles*
- Mastering the fundamentals is crucial for chess players.
- Key principles include controlling the center, playing with all pieces, and ensuring king safety.
02:12 *🏰 Controlling the Center*
- Controlling the center squares (e4, d4, e5, d5) is vital for piece activity and strength.
- Placing pawns on e4 or d4 at the start helps establish central control and sets the tone for the game.
03:59 *🎭 Developing All Pieces*
- Players should bring all pieces into the game gradually, starting with minor pieces (knights and bishops).
- Avoid overextending pawns in the opening to allow smooth piece development.
07:03 *🎯 Queen Placement and Vulnerability*
- Bringing out the queen too early can lead to vulnerability and tactical disadvantages.
- Understanding the vulnerabilities of the f2/f7 squares is crucial for avoiding traps and checkmates.
11:54 *⚔️ Tactics for Material Gain*
- Leveraging tactics like forks can lead to material advantages, even if initially behind.
- Simplifying the position through piece trades can mitigate material deficits and increase winning chances.
13:42 *🏰 King Safety and Castling*
- Castling is essential for king safety, also bringing the rooks into the game effectively.
- Avoid pushing pawns in front of the king unnecessarily, except for creating a space for the king in specific scenarios.
19:01 *🏰 Importance of Pawn Management*
- Pawns should only be pushed when necessary, as they cannot move backwards.
- Pushing pawns too eagerly can weaken positions and leave vulnerabilities.
- Evaluating pawn moves in terms of piece development and board control is crucial.
22:14 *🧩 Improving Piece Activity*
- Once basic principles like development and central control are achieved, focus on improving the least active pieces.
- Doubling rooks on open files can increase their influence and put pressure on opponent's weaknesses.
- Maneuvering knights to more active squares can enhance their effectiveness in the game.
27:17 *⚔️ Capturing Free Pieces*
- Exploiting opponent's blunders and capturing free pieces is crucial for gaining material advantage.
- Identifying and seizing opportunities to capture undefended pieces can significantly impact the game's outcome.
- Leveraging opponent's mistakes to secure material gains sets the stage for a winning endgame.
30:33 *🏆 Endgame Techniques: Staircase and Box Methods*
- Staircase method involves systematically trapping the opponent's king using coordinated queen and rook movements.
- Box method, applicable when having only one major piece, focuses on gradually confining the opponent's king to a corner or edge of the board.
- Mastering these endgame techniques enhances the ability to secure checkmate and win games decisively.
37:14 *🏰 Endgame Checkmate Techniques*
- Techniques for trapping the opponent's king in the endgame to achieve checkmate.
- Utilizing the "box method" to gradually confine the opponent's king to a corner or edge of the board.
- Demonstrating the application of the "staircase method" to systematically restrict the opponent's king's movements until checkmate is achieved.
38:42 *💥 Midgame Checkmate Strategies*
- Importance of delivering checkmates in the middle game to secure victories.
- Highlighting the "kiss of death" checkmate pattern involving the queen's alignment with another piece to trap the opponent's king.
- Emphasizing the value of practicing checkmate patterns through chess puzzles to enhance tactical skills.
Made with HARPA AI
almost 100k subs! please keep on going with educational videos, i love it, you and italy.
YAY almost there!!!!!
Great presentation! You did a wonderful job in explaining things, and you made it look to easy. Great job, wonderful points and easy to remember. Thank you.
This video is fantastic.
Explaining so much to beginning enthusiasts like myself.
Thank You!
Love this video. Thank you. I'm winning more games now that I understand what to do when I'm ahead material. Simplify and win! Thanks, Alessia!
This is one of the best videos I have seen! I needed this, very basic but tons of things I missed all the time, thanks!
Thanks for all your videos, your explanations are very clear and educative.
I actually learned quite a bit here.
See I've been trying out specific openings, but chess is situational.
It's good to learn these openings but, I'd say, the most important thing is just to play. Thank you for helping me understand that, seriously, thank you.
13:24 Cool to see the difference of good development vs. no development. The engine is rating it +3.3 for white just from the development.
Thank you so much for this video! It is the best fundamentals lesson that I've ever seen.
I recently started playing chess, and in last 6-7 months I've watched soooo many videos on it, and none were as good as this for a beginner. (Like, I knew most of what was shown in this video, but only because bits and pieces were in those many videos I watched.) Thank you for this video. This is gonna be saved and I will be rewatching it till it's deeply routed in me.
aww super happy to hear this, thank you for sharing!!
im new also, do you wanna practice together
Just found your channel, great videos! Thank you. I left my email for notification of the course! Can’t wait, it is exciting.
Thank you for your inspiring and enthusiastic way of teaching us these principles. It's obvious you like chess and to win. You're a very good teacher!
This video is so good. Best beginner tutorial out there. Detailed explanation and presentation and lots of fun and passion! Thank you for the lesson!
You are amazing. The most helpful chess channel ever. Love the way you present it all. It's clear, fun, inspiring and even happy! Thanks!
Thanks! Being stuck in the 1700's elo area for 2 years, I knew I was missing some basics (pawn handling).
On lichess, surely?
really nice, clear explanations - thanks :)
Watching this at early morning 4:00 A.M from India. This video is so engrossing. One Particular thing i liked so much is the Logic you explain behind the moves[ Ex: During early Queen attack Knight move is good because Knight is protected by Queen,if Queen Takes knight our queen can take their Queen]. This kind of minor details helps me to understand clearly.
One Request: I am a Beginner, I usually start Good , but loose My Plot in Middle games and End up Resigning most of the times.
Do you have any Videos to learn and Improve Middle games /How to have a strategy or approach for middle Games ?
Any Help Would be Appreciated 👍🏻
This was immensely helpful. Well presented. thank you.
Thank you!!!
Great video. Get a handle on these principles and the player is well on their way to winning many games.
Thanks so much for these examples and explanations. I started getting interested in chess recently, and whilst thinking I knew a lot of these tips already, it's fantastic to see the actual importance of certain moves and decisions. You know how to give the right explanation and I'm eager to implement some of these new things into my games.
Currently I'm 830 Elo. It's... I often know what to do, but my biggest problem is sometimes forgetting or overlooking what pieces protect other pieces. So right after I make a move, I realise I blundered something due to forgetfulness haha.
800 Elo is enough to know however, that the Rook was defended by a Bishop, and not a Pawn at the end ;)
Thanks alot! Cheers!
Excellent lesson!! 😇
It's more like 7 tips to become a 1000
Fair 😂
people at 900 ELO know tactics and openings fairly well so yah..
I guess to become a 800-900
No this is for women. Womens 1500 rating is equvalent to mens 1000.
@@davids9885that's not how rating works and it honestly just seems like a sexist comment
hi Alessia, 26:35 after the check did you intentionally moved the knight instead of capturing c3 knight...!?🙂
Yes. She is explaining the improvement of the knight and not tactics in that particular position, so, in a game that knight improvement could wait that capture.
@@artemeditativa but still I believe B*c3 is the best move
🙃
You are an excellent teacher. Thank you for taking the time to share your wisdom.
I was 800 elo, now 1600 🎉 trying to reach 2000. dont forget this level
Same I'm currently 1810 I'm striving to reach 1900 - 2000
When u was 800
Please give some tips to me bro I am 850 elo
@@flico9754 800 to 1100 easy
@@flico9754 just don't do mistakes
I know its the normal advice to counter e4 with e5 and d4 with d5 but as I've been getting my kids ready for their first tournament, I feel like its a bad way to go. There are just too many tricky openings for that position. The King's Gambit, the Scotch Gambit, etc. The advice I'm giving them is to never counter their opponent's opening with a mirror move. Just with that advice, my 7-year-old daughter has already figured out her own version of the Scandinavian Defense and she's had pretty good luck with it.
interesting. i struggle with openings. My opponent is always trying some trick and i end up with a horrible position that i am not happy with.
Freestyle Fischer 960 chess has taught me recently how bad things can get if you go for center control right away. Sometimes you have to draw the head before the circle.
This is one of THE best tutorials I have watched. Thank you so much!!
26:37 I recon you're exemplify using the knight, but surely Bishop takes white knight on c3 would be stronger than (black) knight to c4?
thanks for such simple explanation, i love this
Good teaching style, using examples from other fields.
excellent comments and good demonstration 😊
40:37 the rook is protected by the pawn, (bishop)
Talented teacher, glad to have found your channel. With love from Burkina Faso
Really good video should help my game with principle playing
26:33 Why not bishop c3?
Bxc3 is the best move
If you move both pawns to center in the beginning the opponent can check you and gain great momentum and tempo on you in the beginning. You would have to know some amazing tactics to get out of it or block. Am I right?
Most of the time those queen/bishop checks can be blocked with a minor piece which actually helps your development. They're only dangerous if your opponent has a concrete tactic, like a double attack with a queen check on the open diagonal. Moving the f-pawn is much more dangerous cause no minor piece can block.
@@spookyfox3716 That's exactly what I'm talking about, the great tactic of that starts with the Check because you moved both pawns to center in first 2 moves. You will get destroyed in online Chess doing this unless you're a GM.
Hi Alessia nice explanation.. useful for my kids to improve the game. Now he is defeating me in chess 😊
A really good video should help my game with principal playing
Thank you love u
Some of my most crushing tactical victories has come for 1.D4 for so i think that's it's important to also clarify that you get all types of different positions in 1. d4, not just a closed KID
yeah the london has lots of interesting tactics available
ooh, couldn't subscribe quick enough, great video for beginners, thanks
I love this passion. Great video. Thanks!
Love the level of details and explanation.
At time 26:33 After QC5+ instead of Nb6, Bxc3 is the best move i think..
nice idea,thank you so much
Alessia is a great teacher.... learning so much.
27:00 you could win a piece
Thank you so much ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Loving this x
Do you have any tips for leveling up past 2000 Elo?🙏🏾🙏🏾
Your videos are very good. I had a request can you also give tips how advance level players can improve and become master level players.
40:35 *The rook is protected by the "Bishop" ... Btw so nice video I loved it and so informative ❤
Thank you ❤
This is brilliant , thanks!
That is coolest thumbnail ever❤
Scholar's mate is easily countered. Usually lower rated or beginner's attempt it.
Great video!
Hey Alessia!💛 I'm a huge fan of yours and Noël's!🤧 And also Congratulations for future 100K Subs!!!❤
I'm from India, past one month learn many think from you sister and I've improved my chess skills . I want to play one chess match with you 😄❣
This is 700 cloches advice not 1500
This is the best chess instruction video I've seen on TH-cam
Nice!!!!!! Here before 100k subs you deserve it
Mam before black castling Bb6 check black should have lost the Q
Congratulations on 100k 😊
I learn a lot from your videos
3:15 whyd you stop?
Dear Alessia, I have been learning and following your channel for a very long time and I have improved a lot with chess.
Reason I want to send this message is that I have recently been defeated by an apponenent stronger than me. I want to share the lines.
I am playing White
E4 D5 (Whish you really hate :)
EXD5 F6 - I took the pawn
Night c3
i defended with night c3
e6 played by black
i took the pawn Dxe6
White played bishop XE6 and took my pawn
I played night F3
Black played Bishop D6
I played pawn to D4
Black pawn H6
I played pawn H3
Black castled
I played bishop to D3
black - night to c6
I castled
--- TRAPED here Alessia :(
Black Queen to D7
I played night E3
white bishop took my pawn xh3
then I took the night gxh3
Queen took my pawn xh3
I moved mu rook to E1 (trying to give some space to king)
black Night to G4
I played king to E2
White checked me with black bishop H2 +
I took with my night Xh2
Queen took the night Xh2 with a check
I moved my king to F1
then White queen H1 MATEED :(
Nice. Explanation
Love from India . ❤🎉
You deserve more subscribers
I heard about "center control" but thank you for yhis video
Lol, why the pause at 3:16? I initially thought my network was down, seems like you paused for a picture 😂
Allesia you are a great teacher, and your wacky personality grabs our full attention.
Allisia how can I contact u ? I love ur session .
Very nice video
Keep it up 👍👍
YOU ARE GIFTED
Ciao Alessia bel video sei bravissima ... ma parli italiano?
You are the best teacher 💗,I won the game with your advice ❤, & at last you are beautiful 😎
Congrats 🥂 you reach 100K sub😮
Ciao Alessia !!! Ti ho dedicato una premierè sulle tue partite a tavolino !!! Sarei felice se lo guardassi !!! Grazie !!!
Did you know what is the funniest part of the Chess game?!
When the english translators were naming the chess pieces from persian, they put the word "VAZIR" which means "Counselor" or "Iranian first minister" to the: queen!
The problem is: when a soldier reaches the last row of the chessboard, he can become a Counselor (VAZIR). Even if all eight soldiers reach the final line, they can become Counselor (VAZIR).
What happened now:
They have changed the king's advisor to the king's wife, and if any soldier reaches the last row of the chess, the king gets a new wife 🤣🤣🤣
So embarrassing!
Khosrow
Thanks ❤ miss and ur accent is very very cute 😅
Amazing video, tks
You won my heart
Thank you mam i learned a lot. It get too easy to learn by seeing your face expressions😅
thanks for a great lesson
Ah this accent is gonna be favorite from now❣️
The increasing popularity of chess is amazing. However one must ask why there is only two out of the top 50 chess players being women?
Maybe the numbers are incorrect however in this time of opportunity and equality of access you would think this statistic would change or are the vast resources of women still not concerning themselves with such challenges.
The line: unless you are magnus carlson and want to troll your opponent
Man it got me dying😂😂
Can’t watch the video yet but the thumbnail 😂👌
Make a video for 800 rating players 😊
Please 🥺🥺
hello i know that you mean bishop on the end but ...i see no one writte the miss....thanks for the video :D
Alessia Teacheramo
Underrated comment
Thank you
Could you please 1) teach us end of the game with rook's tactics 2) how could win with out queen against to player 3) do daily makes videos of explain magnus , Kasparov,karpov, Michael,paulmorphy,anandh, please explain mam i beg your leg mam and i bow my head in front of you because you are a well known person how to teach according to our knowledge thank you so much finally i love your game but not you finally you are beautiful angel
I knew that controling the center is important but i forgot all about it
and I'm here to remind it
@@Alessia_Santeramoty, its instilled in my subconscious mind since watching your videos.
Thanks
You're really cute 🙈 Thanks for the tips love your way of explaining that's actually improving my game ❤️✨
Grazie Alessia.
Maguns carsel ke pase esa Trick work nay karega...i think so 😊😊😊
CanI become a grandmaster in 1 year is it possible