Good idea! U should improve it in the case when a piece makes several moves.
Most Recent
Forum Legend
Following
New Comments
Locked Topic
Pinned Topic
Hi all,
As a very beginning player, I've found it fairly hard to find common "main lines" written/presented in a digestible way. The chess.com Openings games are awesome (e.g. https://www.chess.com/openings/Dutch-Defense-Leningrad-Main-Line), but hard to reference "at a glance" unless you are quite fluent in the algebraic notation (i.e. "1.d4 f5 2.c4 Nf6 3.g3 g6 4.Bg2 Bg7 5.Nf3" is provided, and I know how to read it, but it doesn't help me get the idea without clicking through each move). Wikipedia and really the whole internet seems to do it the same way haha (e.g. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dutch_Defence).
I've been making myself these little annotated pictures:
I guess my question is is there a reason a "notation/annotation" system like this does not exist? Am I doing myself a disservice by thinking about learning the lines like this? Or maybe strong, can I propose its adoption
?
Thanks,
David