Need A Good Opening

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22nd January 2008, 07:24am
#1
by Feldmm1
United States
Member Since: Dec 2007
Member Points: 612

Hey. I am not very good at chess. so I was thinking about using an opening other than the usual, easy, most common one (e4,e5, Nf3, etc.) so I might be able to improve my games. Trouble is, there are so many openings to choose from. I want at least 2 openings, 1 for black and 1 for white. I want them to be strong openings, but hopefully not very well known so it is harder for people to counter against them. Can someone recommend some good openings for me to use? Also, please explain why this opening is a good one and exactly why you move something to somewhere.

22nd January 2008, 07:31am
#2
by Feldmm1
United States
Member Since: Dec 2007
Member Points: 612
Thanks I will look at it.
22nd January 2008, 07:44am
#3
by Feldmm1
United States
Member Since: Dec 2007
Member Points: 612
Wow that is a good one. Anyone have an opening for black?
22nd January 2008, 07:44am
#4
by rgp89
New Jersey United States
Member Since: Jan 2008
Member Points: 676


Thanks for the link.  It is a sweet opening.

 


22nd January 2008, 08:12am
#5
by Feldmm1
United States
Member Since: Dec 2007
Member Points: 612
Thanks. Anyone else have anything to say or an opening to recommend?
22nd January 2008, 08:33am
#6
by Kojon
Steenwijk, Netherlands
Member Since: Nov 2007
Member Points: 15
try playing 1. g3 for a while, those openings are also fun, because they're not so common i think.
22nd January 2008, 08:35am
#7
by milutinovic
Pancevo, Serbia Serbia
Member Since: Oct 2007
Member Points: 21

I think that you are thinking of chess in most wrong way possible.

You don't learn opening by heart (you do, but its a loooong way to it).

Learning chess should involve, respectively:

1. Learning game rules (all of them, 50 move, en passant, castling, piece moving)

2. Learning endgame principles (because this is chess)

3. Learning midlegame principles (because this is calculation and positional play)

4. Learning openings (because this is memorization, but for both sides at the same time, because you don't play alone, you can also be surprised)

For each opening there is a main idea and a main problem for both sides. Once you got them all by heart, you are on a one-tenth way of playing that opening. A lot variations remain to be seen and played, and to choose which one will suit your style.

22nd January 2008, 12:48pm
#8
by Feldmm1
United States
Member Since: Dec 2007
Member Points: 612
It does not extremely appeal to me but I will try it.
22nd January 2008, 02:16pm
#9
by Dutch_Defense
Cleveland, Ohio United States
Member Since: Nov 2007
Member Points: 429
I don't like these openings I'm about to give, but try the Ruy Lopez as white and Siclian as black (just to aviod a King's Gambit).
22nd January 2008, 02:18pm
#10
by dalmatinac
Croatia
Member Since: Jan 2008
Member Points: 3201
Ruy Lopez and Queen's Gambit as white// French defense,Sicilian defense and Nimzo-Indian Defense as black
22nd January 2008, 02:23pm
#11
by rgp89
New Jersey United States
Member Since: Jan 2008
Member Points: 676
I recommend the Caro-Kann as black.
22nd January 2008, 02:25pm
#12
by Unbeliever
United States
Member Since: Nov 2007
Member Points: 1119
Ruy Lopez or Four Knights Variation as White, and Caro-Kann as Black.
22nd January 2008, 02:30pm
#13
by chessis4coolppl
United States
Member Since: Jun 2007
Member Points: 72

If you are aggressive, then I would suggest the Danish Gambit for the white peices. It is not well known and its a very fun opening. White is aiming 1. e4 e5 2. d4 exd4 3. c3 dxc3 4. Bc4 cxd2 5. Bxd2. Monster bishops.

 

Of course black can decline...and you still must deal with the black side of things and when black doesn't play e5. These are things such as the Sicilian Defense, the Center-Counter, the French Defense, Caro-Kann, Pirc, Modern, etc. But it is still a fun opening since a lot of players play e5 in response to e4.

For black, the Sicilian Dragon (my friend plays it, not me). I'm no expert but it looks fun...lots to learn though.

22nd January 2008, 02:36pm
#14
by chessis4coolppl
United States
Member Since: Jun 2007
Member Points: 72
Casasayas wrote:

The Ponziani opening is quite good, and you´ve got a video where it is esplained how to get on with it, it is quite unknow;

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JOZLHeKWhTQ

 Hope i helped you :)


I'm sorry to put it this way, but the Ponziani is just pure trash.I beat a 1700 who played it. I'm 1300 USCF! It ignores development and allows black to break in the center.

22nd January 2008, 02:57pm
#15
by Feldmm1
United States
Member Since: Dec 2007
Member Points: 612
Thanks, I will consider all of your posts. Just a reminder though that I said I was looking for openings that are not very well know. However, I might consider the Sicilian anyway.
 

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