I like all of the ideas you have so far. If you're going to track more than one time control, I would advise tracking that as well. And perhaps you would also want to note if you were confident in the opening? Just a few ideas. Good luck with your games!
Spreadsheet Advice - "How to Analyze" Article

Great suggestions @RakeNightfur Really appreciate it! I had just added Uncomfortable Openings as a category, but the Time control is a brilliant idea. I had missed that. Thank you!

I would also track if it was a clean game or a back and forth slugfest haha… not every game is one sided and being able to see which ones are is nice

Ah that makes sense! Thanks @ninjaswat ! Would you say, maybe the Chesscom game classifier would be sufficient (i.e. Wild, Giveaway, Sharp) etc?
Part of me is wondering if I'm just replicating the Insight tracker in a poor way on Excel. Wondering if it's too much effort for something that's already reviewable on Insights. But maybe manually managing this will assist in retention. Eventually, I'd like to add Matt's spaced repetition formulas onto the games for Blunder practice etc.
I think the main thing the Excel spreadsheet hits that Insights doesn't is a more focused, intentional review at a single game level rather than the 10,000 foot view over x days. If the Insights focus had the ability to narrow down to single games (i.e. click Blunders and go through all blunders) then it'd be great, but since it doesn't, this spreadsheet will help me be able to break down any instance of particular item I want to practice.
Hi everyone! As I'm on my first week, I wanted to get a better system going for tracking all of my game notes. I'm placing them in my forum topic as well as an Evernote table that I have, but I want to imitate the spreadsheet that Matt screenshot in his "How to Improve" article
So far, the columns I'm tracking:
Other Potential ideas:
As I'm still establishing this new excel spreadsheet, is there anything else I should add before it gets too deep? I really want to work on my spaced repetition and continuing to learn from these past errors even after I've done my immediate post-game breakdown.