did you read the paragraph -_- resources for endgame i will use chessable soon when i get more courses available
How to improve from 2100 to 2200 rapid?


Oh yeah i'll look at the first one somebody suggested that before i check out the other two as well

I'll assume you have a good database. One of the things I do is click through games (maybe 5 minutes per game) of the great players...I've finished Morphy, Steinitz, Lasker and Capablanca, almost through with Alekhine. That includes the simuls they played, so you see how they beat lesser lights. I think there may be some benefit to seeing how mistakes got punished, as the average CM now probably knows more theory than GMs of 100 years ago.
An alternative is to start with the Ks and work forward with the world champions since 1975...or maybe start with Fischer. My concern is that their opponents are at a higher level and often won't make the same mistakes one sees at lower levels while trying to get from 2100 to 2200.

and click through all of Kramnik's games, since he was a Catalan aficionado...and Carlsen is playing it a lot at the moment
#1
"I'm mainly winning games by tactical means."
++ That is normal, you probably are losing games by tactical means too.
"What books do I buy"
++ "Dvoretzky's Endgame Manual" - Dvoretzky
"I asked my parents to buy chess structures by rios already"
++ That probably will not help much
"Any good openings where you attack your opponent"
++ If your opponent plays well, then you cannot attack him.
You can only win an attack after your opponent has made a mistake.

I'd recommend you to read the book "How to study chess on your own" by GM Davorin Kuljasevic. It will give you a lot of insights, how to analyze your games, to spot your weaknesses and how your training should look like, depending on your strength, your weaknesses and your goals. Also which resources to use, what can be made wrong in chess training, etc. Stuff like that. Lots of useful insights. You won't improve immediately by reading this book, but you will be able to make a clear study plan so your training later on will be better structured and more efficient.

Questions: What books do I buy
Endgame Strategy
by Mikhail Shereshevsky
Magnus Wins With White
by Zenon Franco
Magnus Wins With Black
by Zenon Franco

Sacrifice and Initiative by Sokolov has a number of great points regarding when to attack, and how. I've been going through game by game with Stockfish and have found some holes in some of the specific lines, but the principles are timeless. Includes 92 instructive games, and broken down into categories such as Ignoring the Threat; Keeping the Momentum; Standard Attacking Plans; Developing the Atttack; Sensing the Moment; the Fight for the Initiative; Pawn Breaks; the Decoy Sac; the Castled King; the King Chase; King in the Center; Sac for Development; Clearance Sac; Pawn Structure Sacs; Unexpected Sacrificing Motifs; Intuitive Sacs.
Ah yes, the 4th redition(why the word redition was chosen idk) of me asking the most vague question ever. Some backstory to minorly help but it won't: I play caro for black against 1. e4, I play QGD mainly for black against 1. d4 though i have tried other openings. For white, I play the catalan. I'm mainly winning games by tactical means. Questions: What books do I buy(I asked my parents to buy chess structures by rios already) but any more: Any good openings where you attack your opponent: Resources to get better at endgames: How do you convert completely winning advantages in attacks or positionally: probably some more but I can't think of it rn if i have more i'll ask in a different forum.