How Did I lose this game.
You blundered a knight and a rook in two moves which kind of equalized it and then allowing the rook to pin and win your queen sealed the deal.
A LOT of bad moves, and blunders.
You played a G30, and made 64 moves, and used less then 10 minutes.
https://www.chess.com/analysis/game/live/4910786067
He lost his queen but He still won. I think its because I took his rook instead of his bishop at the end.
If you take the bishop, his rook takes your queen and after you take his rook, it’s your rook plus six pawns against his rook plus two, which should be a winning endgame in your favor—if played properly. You’re right that that was the deciding move of the game, but as others said, your blunders created unnecessary opportunities for your opponent to fight back.
We all make mistakes, all we can do is try a little bit harder the next time around.
You just made too many errors. More than your opponent. And, as someone else mentioned, played too quickly (didn't use your time well).
In the following position you are a whole queen up and should win.
Shortly afterwards, however, you make a mistake and lose a bishop.
Soon afterwards you make an even worse blunder.
In the following position you should have massive alarm bells going off in your head. Horrible things can happen when your king has no escape squares.
Look. You made a lot of errors. But don't worry about it. We all make errors, especially at this level.
The most important thing is to do better in the future. Here are three simple lessons you can take from this.
1. In a future game, if you blunder a piece (even a queen) don't resign. At this level mistakes can - and will - happen. Play on and hope your opponent makes the next blunder. In the game you just played I give credit to your opponent; by not resigning he gave you the opportunity to make those errors. You could say, he made his own luck.
2. Don't move so quickly. You had plenty of time left on the clock. Just a few more seconds spent on each move could have made all the difference.
3. Before you make each move, do quick check. Are any of your pieces under attack? Can your opponent check you next move? If the answer to either question is yes, spend a few seconds to see whether you need to do something about it.
Keep playing!!
https://www.chess.com/analysis/game/live/4910786067
He lost his queen but He still won. I think its because I took his rook instead of his bishop at the end.