How should I learn openings?

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RorschachTest1

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Paleobotanical
bourbonguy1 wrote:

I’m new to playing chess. I’m an older guy and the memory isn’t what it used to be (it’s a good day when I remember to put on pants lol). Seriously, memorizing a bunch of openings isn’t going to work for me. I’ve picked a couple of openings to learn for both white and black and I’ve  been reading Chernev’s Logical Chess looking at these openings not so much to learn the opening but to understand the reason behind the moves in the opening. Doing that has really helped me to better understand opening principles. I’ve heard many coaches say not to bother learning a bunch of openings, at the beginning at least, but to learn sound opening principles. That’s what I’m doing. 

 

Sounds like a solid approach.  My suspicion is (I don't have the personal experience to say for certain this is true, but it seems like it to me) that at the very high end, memorizing openings is more about saving calculation time and being able to make the right move quickly, since both players, absent knowledge of a particular opening, are still likely to stick to reliable moves, they'll just take longer doing it.

RorschachTest1

i think when it comes to grandmaster games they will prepare opening ideas that would be quite hard to find over the board, but im not really an expert.

RorschachTest1

i made this just for you senpai.

BooshLew1907

Just try experimenting with different openings, and whichever you like or whatever works for you.

Problem5826

I've got some Ginger GM videos, and a Fritz-trainer.

Doesn't take as much time, and they go through middlegames and endgames.

I dislike things like chessable which is just about memorizing lines and doesn't show you the middlegame ideas. Got a refund.

RobertJames_Fisher

I love videos with tutorials thechesswebsite.com one of my favs

sholom90
Yosef115 wrote:
jerrylmacdonald wrote:

Whatever works for you.  My advice is do more than memorize the lines.  Understand the strengths and weaknesses of the opening as well as the plan of it.

I've heard something like beginners don't need to memorize the lines but I do. 

The problem with memorizing lines is that when you play other beginners or novices they never stick to “book” moves anyway and so all your memorization and preparation is at the window.  But if you learn and are solid in principles, then a non book move (or something weird) will not throw you off.

I remember the first time I played Sicilian as black.  I knew the regular lines.  The game started off this way:

1 e4 c5 then white played 2 e5

What?!  What was that?!  I had never seen anything like that before. So there I was in a rapid game wondering if there was some sort of trap I was about to fall into and spent far too much time on my second move. Eventually I just fell back to principles, and played 2...Nc6 

There's just too much to memorize.  Opening principles will absolutely get a beginner off on the right foot.

(And if my opponent had known basic principles, he wouldn't have played 2 e5)

wakamayos

Nice!!

toy_titan

My first word?