Ggjm
Are there some ways to improbe my endgame
Endgames are easy to calculate, just think ahead and you're probably fine. Also look out for stalemate traps. My opponents usually blunder in the endgame, and I can easily win a game that should be drawn. Granted, I am low ELO so take my opinion with a grain of salt.
Sorry, i posted by accident. The way to learn is 1 month study rook and rook endgame, next month 1 rook endgame, next month queen game, next month queen and rook, next queen and 2 rooks, next pawn game, next bishop... go on forever.
Also, that think of the opening and middlegame as the base. If you lose pieces, destroy your position, blunder, or simply your opponent checkmates you before endgame, then possibility of you winning is very low unless you are playing bullet, where you blunder more.
Besides the knowledge of the basic endgame principles and strategy, the endgame requires accurate calculation- memorization is out of the equation, at least move-by-move memorization (you can memorize certain plans, but this isn't so useful if you cannot calculate properly).
Actually this is the main reason most low rated players are dismissing it as "boring" or "unimportant": They can't afford burning their precious calories to calculate.
Solving endgame studies would certainly be beneficial, but it won't make you an endgame virtuoso.
There is only so much studying that will help you out here. Once you know how to mate with a Queen or a Rook or two Bishops or a Bishop & Knight, you need to know how to get a passed pawn and promote it and the secrets of opposition of the Kings and then it all comes down to forming a plan over the board and executing it by calculating the way forward.
Much of what you do in the endgame is what you do in the middlegame but with fewer pieces.
As someone with a rating of 2100, you should already know most basic endings. Still, here are a few suggestions:
1. study the book, 100 Endings you should Know. This covers both the basic and the practical endings that should be automatic for someone at your level.
2. find the book on Capablanca’s endings. This shows how endgame principles affect middlegame play.
3. When in a middlegame, think about the type of ending that would be favorable to you. This may help influence which pieces you exchange and the pawn structures you change.
Since the endgame is very important, I need to learn it. But there are many situations such as rook vs rook + pawn, queen vs queen + pawn… But it is a bit too hard for me to memorize all methods in different situations. Is there some advice for me?