Please Analyze This!

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not_cl0ud

I am currently looking for tips and tricks on this game I recently played!

I am searching for good advice!

wink.png

Thank you!

White resigned

RaufUsSabid7

Kinda idiotic game with good openings

llama47

In general you're doing the thing inexperienced players commonly do. You're developing 1 or 2 pieces, then moving them around until they're traded off.

4...Bf5, then you trade it off.
7...Bd6, then you trade it off.
9...Ne4, then you trade it off.

During the first 10 moves or so of a game, the focus should not be on attacking, just try to complete development as quickly as possible. "Complete development" is when all your knights and bishops are off the back rank, you've casted, and your queen has moved off the back rank too (so now there are no pieces between your rooks).

So for example your opponent completed development on move 12, and you completed it on move 18.

Until development is complete, don't initiate captures. Only capture to:
1) Win material (or keep material equal)
2) There is no 2.
(ok if it's part of a known opening you're allowed to capture, but until someone is rated 1000 just #1 should be more than enough)

---

Later white blundered a knight on move 15 (which you captured)
And blundered a rook on move 17 (which you didn't capture)

That's everything worth talking about IMO.

Fire

Black had a 73.0 accuracy

White had a 62.5 accuracy

 

I also noticed that there was very much attacking from either side so maybe work on being a little more aggressive 

Fire

in the end black had 4 great moves

not_cl0ud
RaufUsSabid7 wrote:

Kinda idiotic game with good openings

A bit mean...

not_cl0ud
llama47 wrote:

In general you're doing the thing inexperienced players commonly do. You're developing 1 or 2 pieces, then moving them around until they're traded off.

4...Bf5, then you trade it off.
7...Bd6, then you trade it off.
9...Ne4, then you trade it off.

During the first 10 moves or so of a game, the focus should not be on attacking, just try to complete development as quickly as possible. "Complete development" is when all your knights and bishops are off the back rank, you've casted, and your queen has moved off the back rank too (so now there are no pieces between your rooks).

So for example your opponent completed development on move 12, and you completed it on move 18.

Until development is complete, don't initiate captures. Only capture to:
1) Win material (or keep material equal)
2) There is no 2.
(ok if it's part of a known opening you're allowed to capture, but until someone is rated 1000 just #1 should be more than enough)

---

Later white blundered a knight on move 15 (which you captured)
And blundered a rook on move 17 (which you didn't capture)

That's everything worth talking about IMO.

I can't help being unexperienced. I'm just this way. I will improve eventually.

llama47
ChessFlair01 wrote:
llama47 wrote:

In general you're doing the thing inexperienced players commonly do. You're developing 1 or 2 pieces, then moving them around until they're traded off.

4...Bf5, then you trade it off.
7...Bd6, then you trade it off.
9...Ne4, then you trade it off.

During the first 10 moves or so of a game, the focus should not be on attacking, just try to complete development as quickly as possible. "Complete development" is when all your knights and bishops are off the back rank, you've casted, and your queen has moved off the back rank too (so now there are no pieces between your rooks).

So for example your opponent completed development on move 12, and you completed it on move 18.

Until development is complete, don't initiate captures. Only capture to:
1) Win material (or keep material equal)
2) There is no 2.
(ok if it's part of a known opening you're allowed to capture, but until someone is rated 1000 just #1 should be more than enough)

---

Later white blundered a knight on move 15 (which you captured)
And blundered a rook on move 17 (which you didn't capture)

That's everything worth talking about IMO.

I can't help being unexperienced. I'm just this way. I will improve eventually.

I didn't mean it as an insult. It's a very common thing to see in games happy.png

not_cl0ud

17. O-O  --  A MISCLICK!!!

not_cl0ud
llama47 wrote:
ChessFlair01 wrote:
llama47 wrote:

In general you're doing the thing inexperienced players commonly do. You're developing 1 or 2 pieces, then moving them around until they're traded off.

4...Bf5, then you trade it off.
7...Bd6, then you trade it off.
9...Ne4, then you trade it off.

During the first 10 moves or so of a game, the focus should not be on attacking, just try to complete development as quickly as possible. "Complete development" is when all your knights and bishops are off the back rank, you've casted, and your queen has moved off the back rank too (so now there are no pieces between your rooks).

So for example your opponent completed development on move 12, and you completed it on move 18.

Until development is complete, don't initiate captures. Only capture to:
1) Win material (or keep material equal)
2) There is no 2.
(ok if it's part of a known opening you're allowed to capture, but until someone is rated 1000 just #1 should be more than enough)

---

Later white blundered a knight on move 15 (which you captured)
And blundered a rook on move 17 (which you didn't capture)

That's everything worth talking about IMO.

I can't help being unexperienced. I'm just this way. I will improve eventually.

I didn't mean it as an insult. It's a very common thing to see in games

ik happy.png

not_cl0ud
ChessFlair01 wrote:

17. O-O  --  A MISCLICK!!!

Annoying, ikr?

The_Arrow_Of_Requiem

Not bad. Except for the fact that you are trading pieces a bit too often. Try to understand when to trade material. 17. O-O was a blunder, but as you are saying its a misclick, you are forgiven.