hey guys, I’m losing a lot of chess games I was wondering if any of you guys had advice for me?




1st is that Too many people focus on the rating and when they focus on the rating they play much worse.
2nd is the mental part like removing distractions, your opponent’s elo so put it on focus mode so that you can’t see your opponent’s elo, and after every blunder you should try to forget the blunder and keep playing or rest.
3rd is too identify your weaknesses and try to improve at them like if you keep blundering then find a way to fix that and that goes for every other part of chess. Wile you review a game here are questions to ask. Did I make a mistake in the opening? What mistake did I or the opponent make, and what did I miss? things you might have missed are free pieces, tactics, and weaknesses. For super new players you should first check the meanings of chess terms and learn basic principles in the opening and then learn how to make a plan and blunder check your moves and your opponent’s to see blunders from both sides. Search up practical and theoretical endgames to learn them.

1st is that Too many people focus on the rating and when they focus on the rating they play much worse.
2nd is the mental part like removing distractions, your opponent’s elo so put it on focus mode so that you can’t see your opponent’s elo, and after every blunder you should try to forget the blunder and keep playing or rest.
3rd is too identify your weaknesses and try to improve at them like if you keep blundering then find a way to fix that and that goes for every other part of chess. Wile you review a game here are questions to ask. Did I make a mistake in the opening? What mistake did I or the opponent make, and what did I miss? things you might have missed are free pieces, tactics, and weaknesses. For super new players you should first check the meanings of chess terms and learn basic principles in the opening and then learn how to make a plan and blunder check your moves and your opponent’s to see blunders from both sides. Search up practical and theoretical endgames to learn them.
Just saying, but you should break up your points into paragraphs next time to make it easier to read.

Low level puzzles are mostly checkmating patterns, so there is a good reason to do them. The more advanced puzzles might not come up in your games. But either way, if you are serious about improving I'd recommend at least 30 minutes of them each day. Results won't be instant. You'll have to work at it for months. But if you want to become a titled player, which I see on your profile that you do, then you're going to have to put in the effort.
Also, you play a LOT of blitz, and this isn't a good way to become better at the game. A lot of your improvements and breakthroughs will come from rapid time controls or longer. You need to spend your time calculating - working on that skill, and you can pick up a lot of bad habits from blitz if you are not careful. I do blitz one night a week (Tonight actually. I just finished with my twitch stream). But beyond that, I only do rapid so I'd suggest you do the same if you are serious about improving.
You're at a rating level where you can play very brick and mortar style chess. You don't want to be making crazy sacrifices and doing advanced tactics, because at the level you are at right now, you might not have the calculation skills needed to make these advanced tactics pay off. The way to reach 1000 is to play solid, get your pieces developed and castle, not blunder, and notice and grab free pieces that your opponent has blundered. If you can do that, you can easily get to 1000 and beyond.

just tell your self "I can do it" and if that method won`t work just think
(this is a joke)👉🏻Just cheat or use stockfish

Improving Your Chess - Resources for Beginners and Beyond…
https://www.chess.com/blog/RussBell/improving-your-chess-resources-for-beginners-and-beyond

It's mostly about following key principles when playing. That approach helped me reach a 2000+ rating, and I teach others to do the same. You can learn them yourself as well. Here's an example of some chess principles: https://www.chess.com/article/view/principles-of-chess