I am nooooooooooooob


you play a lot of rapid games, which is good, but you keep throwing your pieces away and getting them captured, with that amount of time you shouldn't be doing that. look around the board and see where your opponent's pieces can go. In addition look at where your pieces can go to. Also, study a lot of tactics/puzzles that will help you recognize winning positions.
finally have a strong opening, try watching beginners yt video that shows you what you need. Lastly ask questions on forums like you did now to prove your chess.

Dear Ilikeblackpink,
I am a certified, full-time chess coach and International Master, so I have seen it and tried it all.
There are so many ways to get better and I know it can be overwhelming.
You can learn from free videos on youtube, there are books at your disposal that can all help, but they are not tailored to your needs.
One of the most important things you can do is to analyze your games! You must learn from your mistakes! That is a priority. You can't really move on to a new, different topic and learn new ideas if you still make the same mistakes over and over again!
This is where a chess coach comes into the picture. A good coach can show you how to study, what to study, gives you the material YOU need. Naturally, it takes time to use everything in practice, but if you are relentless and persistent you will succeed!
You should learn the main principles in every area of the game (opening, middlegame, endgame). Don't focus on only one part! You should improve your tactical vision as well as it is part of all areas!
This how I built my training program for my students. We discuss more than one topic during a lesson so it's always interesting and they can improve constantly. I give homework too and the right tools to make practicing enjoyable and effective!
Don't worry about your rating and the ups and downs! Just keep on playing and practicing!
I hope this helps. I wish you good games and 100+ extra ratings

Hi! Sorry to hear that you keep on loosing!
My name is Lauren Goodkind and I’m a chess coach based and chess book author based in California.
I have tips to help you improve your chess skills so you can win more games.
-I offer a free beginner’s free eBook on my website, www.ChessByLauren.com in case you are interested. The book is about asking questions before each move.
-Learn basic tactics such as the fork, discovered attack, pin, and more. I offer interactive puzzles on my website: https://www.chessbylauren.com/two-choice-puzzles.php
-I recommend two books for you: “50 Poison Pieces” and “Queen For A Day: The Girl’s Guide To Chess Mastery.” Both books are available on Amazon.com. Both books are endorsed by chess masters!
-If you are serious about chess, I highly recommend you hiring a chess coach to help you.
I hope that this helps.

Watching for hanging pieces (seeing if the opponent is threatening to capture anything of yours), learning some basics and following chess opening principles:
https://www.chess.com/blog/KeSetoKaiba/opening-principles-again
is probably enough to get just about anyone to 1000+ chess.com rating with some time and practice to implement these concepts. It might take a while (some longer for some people), but feel free to also message me if you have any chess questions, want to play some unrated live chess or simply want to chat chess for a bit

yeah
your rating will effortlessly rise a lot
im basically exactly 1000 and i agree that its easy
but the average person is 800 here

I started with a losing streak till 100+ too. It was tough but I stop playing with players for a while and focus on bots for some time as we can have a better idea how to move with assisted tools. Puzzles and lessons are good reference to use whenever available. I upgraded to platinum recently and focuses on lessons, puzzles and game analysis on the games I have played. It works well for me so far. I still have lots to learn and hopefully I can improve my mid game tactics and end game. 1 useful advice I have received is to play 30 min instead of 10 min games. It gives you more time to think and plan strategically.
Listening to blackpink fries the brain - burn all their music and you'll improve.
Music cant impact congitive capabilites. Thats pseudoscientific garbage.

Listening to blackpink fries the brain - burn all their music and you'll improve.
Music cant impact congitive capabilites. Thats pseudoscientific garbage.
Directly impact cognitive abilities? I agree that music probably doesn't work this way. However, music can have a powerful impact on mood, atmosphere and relaxing and all of these things can certainly put you in a position to have higher cognitive functioning.
I may argue that music could help cognitive capabilities from this perspective.
p.s. For what it is worth, I don't listen to K-pop a whole lot, but I like Blackpink. I'm usually more into rock or classical music though.

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

Hi! My name is Lauren Goodkind and I’m a respected chess coach and chess YouTuber based in California:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCP5SPSG_sWSYPjqJYMNwL_Q
Sorry to hear that you keep on losing in chess. Here’s some ideas to help you get better.
-I recommend two books for you: “50 Poison Pieces” and “Queen For A Day: The Girl’s Guide To Chess Mastery.” Both books are available on Amazon.com. Both books are endorsed by chess masters!
-If you are serious about chess, I highly recommend you hiring a chess coach to help you.
-Also consider all checks and captures on your side and also your opponent’s side. Always as, “If I move here, where is my opponent going to move?”. Do this for every single move!
-Play with a slow time control, such as G/30 so you have plenty of time to think before every move.
I also offer 500 two-choice puzzles on my website: https://www.chessbylauren.com/two-choice-puzzles.php
I hope that this helps.