Is there an AI tool that is good at explaining why moves are bad/good?

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TacticalTom1

I'm pretty new (500 on chess.com) and would like to be able to quickly understand why moves are good or bad. Chess.com's Game Review feature is ok for this but i'd like to be able to learn as soon as I make a move while i'm playing bots, not during game review after the game. And sometimes, Game Review's explanation is just "That's not the right idea"...

For example, ChatGPT sometimes gives a pretty good answer. In the image below i asked "why is g3 an inaccuracy"? Before, I thought having that exact structure in front of your king was great. But ChatGPT explained it's not a great move because 1) The dark squares in front of the king are weakened and 2) We should be moving pieces in the opening, not pawns. I thought this was a pretty good answer, but usually Chat GPT doesn't give this good an answer.

Does anyone know of an AI tool (or any tool/method) that allows new chess users to quickly understand WHY moves are good or bad? For context i've been stuck at or below 500 for a couple weeks now and feel like i should be improving faster because i'm working really hard (doing lots of puzzles, lessons with a coach, lots of games, reviewing my losses).

xtreme2020
Unfortunately I haven’t really found a good ai yet, ChatGPT and other models still cheat when I play them and offer bad advice. In this case, that’s an alright explanation because this kind of position is so common and it’s seen it so many times. It is weakening your kingside, now your f pawn is pretty much stuck unless you want to open your kingside completely, and when he plays Qf6 you’re going to have to play Qe2 anyways, and if you had played it earlier you could have played Nf3 next move and kicked out the queen. If you’re taking lessons, I’d recommend just screenshotting or somehow saving the positions to ask your coach about, he’ll give a better answer than anything you can find online. In the opening, and especially with common beginner openings like this, you can often find YouTube videos or other resources explaining how to best deal with the position, and even if it doesn’t mention that specific move it’ll mention the best one. For later in the game though, I’d just recommend following the line of the computer’s best moves until you can more clearly see how you gave the other side an advantage. You can also try just asking here, someone will probably respond and hopefully they’ll know enough to be right.
xtreme2020
And ask yourself whether the move you just made
1. Lost material
2.weakened your king
3. Lost space/ made one of your pieces less active
4. Missed an opportunity to do any of those things to your opponent