what's openings you suggest for beginners?

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captain_takpar
I am begginer - pre intermediate chess player and I want to learn some useful openings what do you suggest?
tygxc

Simplest and best is to defend 1 e4 e5 and 1 d4 d5 as black and to open 1 e4 as white.

KingOlli2007
If white go king’s gambit muzio version
WildPumas

For white: https://www.chessable.com/my-first-opening-repertoire-1e4/course/188863/

For black: https://www.chessable.com/counterblow-a-complete-fighting-repertoire-for-beginners-/course/199358/

Those courses were truly made for beginners in mind.

Also u might wanna check out this playlist to study:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AshEhLcPHqU&list=PLQKBpQZcRycrvUUxLdVmlfMChJS0S5Zw0

And this for practical games:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=axRvksIZpGc&list=PLUjxDD7HNNThftJtE0OIRFRMMFf6AV_69

Good luck on your chess journey! happy.png

blueemu

Avoid "system" openings like the London System. Among weak players, system openings act as a substitute for thought, a way to avoid the necessity of thinking. You are trying to improve your chess skills, so you shouldn't be looking for a way to avoid thinking.

You should also avoid openings that play for traps or cheap tricks. That will teach you nothing.

GMKaranveer7

for e4 openings either do sicilian dragon/najdorf or play e5. for d4 openings: probably play some f5 or normally d5 it. as for playing as white in those openings just develop pieces

PromisingPawns

Scotch opening as white and Italian setup against anything else.

jg2648
Any opening that gives you positions you like are what you should play and repeatedly and slowly develop a deep knowledge for. If you aren’t sure what type of positions you like, go into a database and play through various openings by masters, watch some openings on YouTube, play through some openings in your own games, or go through some free ChessAble opening courses. Once you find an opening that seems to give you positions you enjoy playing you can dig into them more over time and learn the various theories, typical middle game plans, and more such. Don’t spend all your time on opening study through, just add to your knowledge over time once you understand the basics of the opening. Most games you’ll deviate from known theory within 6-7 moves at your rating range, so neglecting other chess concepts for opening study will hinder your improvement.
CraigIreland

Imho, at your current rating you shouldn't care about openings. Play typical first moves such as e4 e5, d4 d5 then try to avoid blunders and the wins will look after themselves. If someone beats you with an opening trap then take care to commit it to memory or you'll miss it every time until you do. When you get above 1000 start thinking about having a go to response for each opening you see, beyond the first move, but don't go too deep with theory that you'll never use.

AymanGE

hi guys

magipi

I would suggest to not worry about openings. They are irrelevant. The only thing that matters is to avoid 1-move blunders.

Your last game:

After move 11 the opening is over, and you are completely fine. Then you throw away a piece for no reason (move 12), then you blunder another piece (move 15), then your opponent loses a rook instead of winning the piece, so you are miraculously winning again, but you blunder a rook (move 19), and that's a blunder too many.

Don't play random moves in seconds. Take your time and try to make good moves.

ChessMasteryOfficial

You should prepare your repertoire according to your own chess tastes and style. It is very important that you should like and understand the typical positions which result from your chosen opening. One good method consists of choosing, as a model, a strong player who plays your choice of opening particularly well and often, and then following his games. You study some model games in order, above all, to get a better understanding of the middlegame.

Kyobir

Bongcloud