how to get elo insanely quickly

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Avatar of Sp3ctr4LV01D
Create a new account, get to 100 rating, and then get someone a lot better and more consistent than you to play several games on your account.
Avatar of Sp3ctr4LV01D
Then watch as you get 400 rating in a few hours.
Avatar of Sp3ctr4LV01D
Oh and do it in hyper-bullet to get to 2000 rating by the end of the day
Avatar of The-Chapper

@doyoulikecurry ive had an old account i played on for a long time and my elo was 500 there for almost forever

Avatar of The-Chapper

I did cheat meh got banned on my old account

Avatar of Pudding
Sp3ctr4LV01D wrote:
Create a new account, get to 100 rating, and then get someone a lot better and more consistent than you to play several games on your account.

1. Alts need authorization

2. Rating manipulation

Wow you rlly tryna get him banned

Avatar of Pudding
The-Chapper wrote:

I did cheat got banned on my old account

Is this your second chance account or are you ban evading

Avatar of chesswhizz9

better title:

How to gain Glicko Insanely Quick

Avatar of LonelyBozo

Those who know glicko xD

Avatar of APGHull

Just dedicate a whole week to learning tactics and openings on youtube and that will bump your rating by atleast 100-300 if you're a low elo player

Avatar of Damian_Wayne_AlGhul

Develop pieces (knights, bishops, centre pawns) quickly, castle king to safety, focus on attacking opponent pieces. Enable premoves if ur playing blitz or bullet, helps a lot to flag

Avatar of KeSetoKaiba
Bavannah_Sond wrote:

The fastest way to gain Elo is to stop asking how to gain Elo insanely quickly.

There is no secret method, no magic opening, no YouTube thumbnail that Grandmasters are hiding from you. Everyone who climbed did the same boring thing: played a ton, blundered a ton, and actually fixed the blunders instead of blaming time pressure, mouse slips, or “I was clearly better.”

Pick one opening so you don’t self-destruct by move 8, stop hanging free pieces, and review your losses like they personally insulted you. Do that consistently and your Elo will go up.

Want it “insanely quick”? Discover a miraculous new way to ignore fair play. Otherwise, welcome to chess.

A bit harsh with "don't self-destruct by move 8, stop hanging free pieces" etc. but this is probably the best answer of the first few posts. There's no secret to fast long-term improvement. If you only care about rating, then maybe fastest is to learn some opening trap that many could fall into at the lower levels, but that's not improving at chess; it is relying on the opponent to be unstudied.

Tricks and traps won't help long-term. You'll need to increase your overall chess ability and understanding if you truly want to get good at chess. How to do this depends on your current rating level, ability, knowledge and lots of specifics personal to you and your current chess game.

Avatar of KeSetoKaiba
Damian_Wayne_Al_Ghul wrote:

Develop pieces (knights, bishops, centre pawns) quickly, castle king to safety, focus on attacking opponent pieces. Enable premoves if ur playing blitz or bullet, helps a lot to flag

This helps too, but for improvement, I'd recommend mostly 10 min games or longer (rapid). I also have a blog post on opening principles with lots of helpful links for resources at the bottom of that blog post: https://www.chess.com/blog/KeSetoKaiba/opening-principles-again

Avatar of ZainNaghmi

everyone gangsta till a mod sees this thread

Avatar of ChessMasteryOfficial

The Framework

  1. Learn core principles.

  2. Apply them in slow games.

  3. Analyze your decisions afterward.

This is the framework I use with students I coach.

Here are the core principles:

  • The Principle of Activity & Material: These are the two pillars of chess. You must constantly strive to increase the activity of your pieces while capturing material whenever it is freely given.

  • The Principle of the Least Active Piece: When you aren't sure what to play, identify your "worst" piece and improve its position. This is the secret to consistent positional play.

  • The Principle of Attack: Attacking moves are superior because they force the opponent to react. Prioritize calculating Forcing Moves (Checks, Captures, and Threats) before anything else.

  • Maximum Activity: Place your pieces as forward as possible to restrict your opponent.

  • Keeping the Tension: Do not release the tension (exchange pieces/pawns) unless it gives you a concrete advantage. Releasing tension often helps the opponent free their game.

  • The Principle of the Center: Centralization is the most efficient way to dominate the board.

  • Neutralization: If an opponent has an active piece on your territory, your immediate priority is to attack it, force it back, or exchange it.

  • The 3 Opening Tasks: 1) Develop pieces, 2) Castle, 3) Connect rooks.

  • Endgame Strategy: In the endgame, the logic changes: Activate your King, advance passed pawns, and attack opponent's weak pawns.