Opponent leaves king in the centre? That’s an invitation.
Open lines, bring pieces, don’t trade queens. You don’t need a brilliancy – just consistent pressure.
#ChessAttack#KingSafety
Why the Sicilian Four Knights for Black?
Avoids mainline theory battles
Leads to unbalanced, fightable positions
Transposes into many Anti‑Sicilian lines (covered in Chessneurons Courses)
A complete, practical repertoire.
#ChessOpeningPrep#Sicilian
Positions Create Tactics – Tactics Just Finish Them
You solve 100 tactics a day yet still lose to 1400s. Why?
"Tactics win games, but positions create the opportunities.” – Levy Rozman (@GothamChess, echoed throughout his book How to Win at Chess)
You spot the fork but never reach the position where it exists.
10 fresh GM-curated positional puzzles daily train you to build winning positions.
Start your streak today → https://t.co/9le2R7BWLy
@EndgameaiChess I am sure that Team Pragg would have drawn clear conclusions on what should be avoided after his dip in performance a while back. He clearly belongs to that 2780+ level with his performance. Looking forward to his future classical events.
�� Chess Challenge
One of these moves throws away White's advantage.
Can you spot the blunder?
A) Kb1 B) Bc4
This puzzle comes from ChessNeurons, a platform focused on helping players improve their positional and strategic understanding.
Instead of f4, I might play Kf7 and improve the king's position. Black's position is slightly better due to white's weak pawn structure, but the breakthrough is not so clear.
Your move f4 at first seems like a pawn blunder due to Bxf4, but you have Rf6 and once the bishop moves, you can capture the f3 pawn but the issue is that after f4-Bxf4-Rf6-Bg3-Rxf3-Rd2 ( defending the d3 pawn) white can plan for Re4-Kg2 etc and white's pieces will get a bit more active.
When you’re worse, don’t just defend – make your opponent work for every inch.
Avoid creating new weaknesses. Look for counterplay. Know your drawing resources (perpetual, fortress, stalemate).
Course 6: Comeback shows real examples.
#ChessDefense#Resilience
You can’t attack a perfect position. You must create a hook.
Pawn pushes, exchanges that double pawns, forcing a piece to move away.
One weakness → more weaknesses → collapse.
This is the engine of Slow Wins.
#ChessWeaknesses#ChessStrategy