Play the man, not the board.
I’ve always looked for openings that psychologically destabilize my opponents.
If you don’t have a great memory, it’s probably better to forget about heavily analyzed mainstream opening theory like some of the openings you mentioned.
Personally, I never studied the Ruy Lopez, the Italian Game, Queen’s Indian, King’s Indian, Sicilian Defense, French Defense, or even 1.d4 on move one. I never studied those openings because I knew my opponents would beat me through pure memorization.
So I developed a strategy of searching for annoying secondary lines that create psychological discomfort for the opponent lines with very little theory, but still completely playable.
I think a player has to trust themselves if they want to improve at chess and stop obsessing over what everyone else says.
Choosing what opening to play is deeply connected to personality and psychology. And it’s not the same choosing an opening for blitz, bullet, or a classical 2-hour game.
Your approach to the game can’t be the same across different time controls, so your openings shouldn’t be the same either.
The real question is: are you good at memorizing? Are you good at understanding positions? Are you more strategic or more tactical?
A player’s ultimate goal should be to become “universal” strong both in attack and defense. That’s why the same player can use something like the Caro-Kann and the Latvian Gambit depending on the time format, the approach, the strategy… while still expressing the same personality through both.
Hi everyone,
I'm trying to improve the way I study chess openings and I'd like some advice on the best approach.
Whenever I've tried studying openings in the past, I usually end up memorizing a few lines, then gradually forgetting them later. Most of my improvement honestly came from simply playing games and occasionally doing puzzles.
I'm currently around 1800 rapid (peak around 1950). My "repertoire" is also kinda weird. I really enjoy hypermodern setups (for example Nimzo-Larsen with White and KID with Black against d4), but I'm not sure whether I'm approaching them correctly. I often find myself lost out of the opening, and I suspect I don't really understand the themes and ideas behind these setups well enough to make them work as intended.
For players around this level or above, what approach to opening study worked best for you? Should I focus more on ideas and plans, model games, building a repertoire, understanding typical middlegames, memorizing critical lines, or something else?
I'd appreciate hearing what actually helped people improve.