The whole repertoire for white thing (5:19) would be awesome. I myself get so discouraged to study openings since I don't know where to learn main or principal side lines without branching in some stupid move that one guy played once and it seems "interesting". I know how to punish cause I make my time with tactics, but I would love to get some kind of "best move against best move" line just to get strongs openings. I recommend the channel "Hanging pawns", that guy is teaching what almost every novice chees played wants to know about openings in the correct fashion. But his channel is still like unknown and I think that slows his vid production. Anyway, thanks for this Eric and I hope that all the feedback sums into you to keep improving your content. Best of luck at the boards!
This is a great video. Very informative on a template that is incredible to break things down. Your demeanor is very relaxing as well. It’s like you’re a chess player or something.
I'm gonna say this right here, I learnt the most from Eric Rosen. I think he's an inspiration for younger or beginner level players. He's to me the best chess content creator. Better than Levy, better than Hikaru, better than anyone else. Similar one is Ben Finegold. Very helpful, wholesome and inspirational.
Excellent video, I had never realized creating my own analysis boards could be so helpful in learning openings ! Keep up with the great content and your awesome teaching skills !
This is a very helpful video. Presumably, there’s someway to use a database to create opening lines, and engine to test the best lines, and to play out various typical middle or endgames
Chesstempo has a very nice spaced repitition repetoire system (similiar to chess position trainer) which is really good for building long term memory.. they also have the best tactics there
IMO memorization of openings is overrated, unless it is some crazy complicated line in which theory changes every month. More important that memorizing move orders is understanding the opening enough to intuitively find reasonable moves on the board. Memorization is fragile, it does not help with finding middle game plans and also leaves you lost if the enemy deviates from theory
@@bujarmurati3004 duh yes of course you need to know the ideas also since you have to play past the opening.. you also need to know the actual moves if you want to get past a certain level or you will be crushed by your opponents with superior preparation. Even if you dont get crushed outright you will end up in inferior positions going into the middle game in many openings.
Eric i just want to say i am loving your content. when i first started watching people analize i wasnt a big fan but as ive gotten better ive figured out you are very good at what you do. Keep up the good work man. One constructive comment though, you should do an outro on your videos. or some kind of build up so we know the video is coming to an end. often time i am fully imersed and then the video just ends seemingly out of nowhere. just food for thought. love you stuff man. keep it up. good luck in your journey to gm
Go player checking in here: Love you're channel. I don't play chess, but I like hearing you talk strategy and practice. Have you ever tried playing Go before?
Thanks for the Lichess tip! I can't believe how most opening books scatter the repertoire in the notes to moves made in game. The ebooks on the app even screw you harder by telling you to consult "the notes to move 13 in game 7" but the games have no number and are listed by the player names instead lmao. There are no Modern defence books that use the far better variation tree and it is also left to you to figure out Pirc and King's Indian transpositions because Nf6 usually transposes and that changes the name which doesn't freaking matter. Some authors even treat an early Nf6 as a vulgarity a true Modern defence artiste like the reader would never resort to 🙄
Really enjoyed the video. One thing you mentioned was when starting out you would put everything in one chapter. As the lines progressed you would split them into their own chapters. Is there a way to do that without copying from one and pasting in a new chapter? One other thing I was looking for but haven't found as yet is a video or videos on getting the most out of LiChess. Looking at LiChess FAQ's haven't really helped. I'd like to know what the Lobby is for, how do you go about making friends on Lichess so you can play games with them when they're online, etc. Thanks for everything!!
Nice vid but ... Now we have a nice system to register all our opening studies. But how do we train them. Is there a spaced repetition methode? Do we 'read the opening' some time later? (Which doesn't work.) So how do we *learn* the opening instead of *registering* the opening?
I would like to ask ( here so that YT viewers see this as well ) -> any recommended websites / books for learning a lot of openings? if this is what you said in the video , I'm asking this before watching :))
Depends. No opening is the best. You pick the one you like, play it, study it, improvise it, and master it. I use Queens Gambit as white and French as black.
Eric Rosen and Daniel Naroditsky are pretty much my coaches. The amount of instruction they give us is awesome!
The whole repertoire for white thing (5:19) would be awesome. I myself get so discouraged to study openings since I don't know where to learn main or principal side lines without branching in some stupid move that one guy played once and it seems "interesting". I know how to punish cause I make my time with tactics, but I would love to get some kind of "best move against best move" line just to get strongs openings. I recommend the channel "Hanging pawns", that guy is teaching what almost every novice chees played wants to know about openings in the correct fashion. But his channel is still like unknown and I think that slows his vid production. Anyway, thanks for this Eric and I hope that all the feedback sums into you to keep improving your content. Best of luck at the boards!
hanging Pawns is an amazing channel for learning openings
Nice to see someone, who loves "Hanging Pawns"
i went from complete novice to novice with stepan videos, love that guy and rosen senpai ofc
5:16 -> that would be great. I've been waiting for it since you mentioned it once, long time ago. Would greatly appreciate it.
This is a great video. Very informative on a template that is incredible to break things down.
Your demeanor is very relaxing as well.
It’s like you’re a chess player or something.
I'm gonna say this right here, I learnt the most from Eric Rosen. I think he's an inspiration for younger or beginner level players. He's to me the best chess content creator. Better than Levy, better than Hikaru, better than anyone else. Similar one is Ben Finegold. Very helpful, wholesome and inspirational.
Excellent video, I had never realized creating my own analysis boards could be so helpful in learning openings !
Keep up with the great content and your awesome teaching skills !
This is a very helpful video. Presumably, there’s someway to use a database to create opening lines, and engine to test the best lines, and to play out various typical middle or endgames
thanks for video on english opening, this opening serves me very well from now on
Thank you so much for this video! Extraordinarily clear
Chesstempo has a very nice spaced repitition repetoire system (similiar to chess position trainer) which is really good for building long term memory.. they also have the best tactics there
IMO memorization of openings is overrated, unless it is some crazy complicated line in which theory changes every month.
More important that memorizing move orders is understanding the opening enough to intuitively find reasonable moves on the board. Memorization is fragile, it does not help with finding middle game plans and also leaves you lost if the enemy deviates from theory
@@bujarmurati3004 duh yes of course you need to know the ideas also since you have to play past the opening.. you also need to know the actual moves if you want to get past a certain level or you will be crushed by your opponents with superior preparation. Even if you dont get crushed outright you will end up in inferior positions going into the middle game in many openings.
Thanks, that was super useful! A way to organize openings' branches... now books look so medieval
Eric i just want to say i am loving your content. when i first started watching people analize i wasnt a big fan but as ive gotten better ive figured out you are very good at what you do. Keep up the good work man. One constructive comment though, you should do an outro on your videos. or some kind of build up so we know the video is coming to an end. often time i am fully imersed and then the video just ends seemingly out of nowhere. just food for thought. love you stuff man. keep it up. good luck in your journey to gm
Go player checking in here: Love you're channel. I don't play chess, but I like hearing you talk strategy and practice. Have you ever tried playing Go before?
Watching in 2021. Thank you so much for this!
Thanks for the Lichess tip!
I can't believe how most opening books scatter the repertoire in the notes to moves made in game. The ebooks on the app even screw you harder by telling you to consult "the notes to move 13 in game 7" but the games have no number and are listed by the player names instead lmao.
There are no Modern defence books that use the far better variation tree and it is also left to you to figure out Pirc and King's Indian transpositions because Nf6 usually transposes and that changes the name which doesn't freaking matter. Some authors even treat an early Nf6 as a vulgarity a true Modern defence artiste like the reader would never resort to 🙄
You are really great to learn from
Thank you Eric !
This is extremely useful. Thanks.
The Rosen Attack! 😎
Another great Eric Rosen video. Did you make the Two Knights video yet...?
Really enjoyed the video. One thing you mentioned was when starting out you would put everything in one chapter. As the lines progressed you would split them into their own chapters. Is there a way to do that without copying from one and pasting in a new chapter?
One other thing I was looking for but haven't found as yet is a video or videos on getting the most out of LiChess. Looking at LiChess FAQ's haven't really helped. I'd like to know what the Lobby is for, how do you go about making friends on Lichess so you can play games with them when they're online, etc. Thanks for everything!!
Nice vid but ... Now we have a nice system to register all our opening studies. But how do we train them. Is there a spaced repetition methode? Do we 'read the opening' some time later? (Which doesn't work.) So how do we *learn* the opening instead of *registering* the opening?
Make a chapter and set "analysis mode" to "interactive lesson" so you can practice it
Yes please , keep that series rolling . Do you have any books out on chessable?
Does anyone know if it's possible to create a sub-chapter in a Lichess study?
I love Eric and this video was awesome :-)
Oh man! Your typing speed is so fast..
Great Video Eric! 😃👍💯
Anyone know how to do something like this on mobile? I can see an option for my private studies, but I can't put anything into it
Mobile doesn't let you edit studies yet, you need to go to the website on mobile and then you can create and edit studies
Great vid eric!
I only play the London for white. Then I play the French and the Dutch
I love Chessable for this.
I didn't even know this was a thing before this video.
How to add a contributor to a study please?
Very good!
Hey Eric! It would be nice if you tweet out when you are about to stream, so we have some kind warning on when you are live
I have a stream schedule! imrosen.com/schedule
Also if you follow me on Twitch, you'll be notified when I go live.
@@eric-rosen Thanks! See you on stream!
How can i contact you
O
Thaks br9 you are great
i used this with chess tempo for fun
Thank you!!!!!!!!
You were supposed to make some two knights video/videos..when will we get those! I wanna learn masta!
Nevermind, responded to the wrong comment lol
very nice vid!! :))
nice video. haven't seen it yet though
I would like to ask ( here so that YT viewers see this as well ) -> any recommended websites / books for learning a lot of openings? if this is what you said in the video , I'm asking this before watching :))
Bardkins chessable
I didn't know you could use lichess to do all that. Why are people paying for chessbase or engines anymore?
Hello Sir
WHICH OPENING IS THE BEST
Bird
Depends. No opening is the best. You pick the one you like, play it, study it, improvise it, and master it. I use Queens Gambit as white and French as black.
If there was one best opening, they'd all play it, wouldn't they
@@StefanReich Mostly winning opening for WHITE and BLACK PLEASE 🙏🙏
@@sahilsharma2952 THANQ SIR🙏🙏
POGGERS
🦑
Repertoire: final syllable is pronounced “twaar”
How do I become the most boring player ever
Any repertoire suggestions?!
Wadaskathabodrabhoma _ Berlin
Follow Ben Finegold, he is the most boring player I know..
@@Conguy97 what against c4 d4 Giuco etc
Play symmetrically. Do whatever your opponent does up to some point. Guaranteed to be boring by test.
As white play the exchange slav and the exchange french.
Chess 960 is the future. No repertoire needed. Just intuition.
I accidentally play theory all the time
That's a huge issue
Because my opponents always seem booked up
And I've never learnt theory ever
@@Phurngirathaana If you play theory without knowing it that's great! It means you have deep understanding of opening principles and good intuition.
Has the future started already? 5 years later I don't see chess 960 taking over normal chess.
no body loves me
you want to get loved by a body?
Well, you are bill cosb....cispy