Still don’t know how to play


Well yeah, chess is a hard game.
Just watching a couple intros and solve some puzzles wont already make you a strong player.
Up to about rating 1000, you should focus on only playing games with long time controls. I would say at absolute minimum Blitz 5|5, but some say up to Rapid 30|0 should be the minimum. So you can properly think what move to make, and can properly blunder check your moves, and have time to actually think about your plans in the position.
If you are 1000 and higher, you will start to recognize common patterns, and playing faster starts making sense.
And you should solve a couple puzzles at the start of every session playing chess. So you learn chess patterns and put your brain in "chess mode".

1. Learn opening principles and incorporate them into you style. There only 3 major principles
2. Play games with slower time controls. No bullet games at all. Let’s say 5-10 blitz games and 2-3 rapid games.
3. Solve puzzles.
4. Enjoy chess. Rating will come eventually.
and its ok to stay at 100 all the time while you get your footing just enjoy and don't become addicted to the ranting climb

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

Could you please be more specific?
I assume you know the moves of the pieces and the concepts but want to find a strategy to win?

Learn and apply the most important principles of chess. - (core of my teaching)
Always blunder-check your moves.
Solve tactics in the right way.
Analyze your games.
Study games of strong players.
Learn how to be more psychologically resilient.
Work on your time management skills.
Get a coach if you can.

Don't worry about brilliant moves. I don't have a lot of time to play chess so I don't play as often as some here, but I think maybe I got a brilliant move once.
Brilliant moves are brilliant because they do something that is hard to spot and it's also highly context sensitive. There's not really a trick to brilliant moves, you just need to know the game really well. As a beginner, it'd be nice to play good and consistently and maybe occasionally spot a great move. And to do that, you need to understand basic principles.
- Know how pieces move and capture.
- Try to have control of the center (this isn't an obvious principle, but it's an important one. From the center your pieces have a lot of ways to create threats, that's why it's important.).
- Know what pieces are worth so you know what's worth risking (Pawns 1, Bishop/Knight about 3, but bishops slightly better most of the time, Rooks 5, Queen 9).
- Use this to work out if you should trade pieces or not.
- Trade when you're up on material.
- Learn basic tactics like forks and pins to create good threats.
- Don't play risky moves which put your pieces in danger when your opponent has a way of escaping/taking advantage, in the hope they might play the moves you need them to play. Because if they don't, it's now your problem.
- Play longer games, think about your moves and use the time you have when you need it, rather than rushing into things.
These are the things that got me playing better than a complete beginner.
(and actually I just checked your profile, and your ratings look okay! Not amazing, but better than mine on average, so what are you worrying about? You know how to play. At this stage I wouldn't be looking for brilliant moves, I'd be analysing my games and figuring out how I lose when I lose.)