The King's Indian is hot again. While Garry Kasparov once said goodbye to his favourite opening, Hikaru Nakamura still plays it at the highest level. His last-round game in Dortmund against Vladimir Kramnik is the
Game of the Week in this week's
ChessVibes Openings #135. But... is the King's Indian in trouble? A GM game in the open tournament in Biel saw an interesting idea for White in the absolute main line...
The latest novelties in your mailbox
Which openings are hot in top level chess? Which are not? Receive the latest opening novelties right in your mailbox with ChessVibes Openings, a weekly PDF magazine (+ PGN!) covering the latest openings news, co-authored by International Masters Merijn van Delft and Robert Ris and published by ChessVibes.
What is ChessVibes Openings?
Every issue consists of a PDF Magazine and the accompanying PGN file. The PDF consists of four pages (A4 size) with the following contents:
- What's hot? A round-up of this week's important opening developments, with statistics about the frequence and score of the week's most important opening novelty (page 1)
- What's not? Which openings are not recommended at the moment, according to the top players? And why not? (page 1)
- Game of the week Each week you'll find the theoretically most important game analysed by our two IMs, with a detailed survey of the opening phase (page 2).
- This week's harvest Four more new important opening ideas from this week (page 3) revealed and described with explanation of the opening and early middlegame (page 3).
- It's Your Move An interactive element: every week two exercises, of which the solutions/explanations will follow one week later. This will improve your understanding of certain opening, middlegame or even endgame themes even further.
This week's issue: #135, August 3, 2011
ChessVibes Openings #135
The tournament in Biel was won by Carlsen, Dortmund by Kramnik, and Armenia, led by Aronian, took gold at the World Team Championship. Adams and Short are leading the British Championship after seven rounds. All about the King's Indian Defence, Bayonet (10.c5) which was covered in our
Game of the week Kramnik-Nakamura, Dortmund 2011.Other lines that are covered:
- Queen's Gambit Declined, 5.Bf4
- Semi-Slav, Anti-Moscow
- King's Indian, main line
- Gruenfeld, Russian System
How to subscribe? Click on one of the buttons:
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For Dutch clients it's possible to pay via iDEAL, the Dutch online bank system with which you can pay safely, secure and comfortably. |
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This week's issue: #134, July 27, 2011
ChessVibes Openings #134
There was an abundance of top level chess this week, which means we can't go into detail everywhere, but we can give you an overview of what happened: the World Team Championship, Biel, Dortmund, Martuni, and more. All about the Marshall Gambit (Attack!?) of the Closed Ruy Lopez which was covered in our
Game of the week Ivanchuk-Leko, World Team Ch (Ningbo) 2011.Other lines that are covered:
- Sicilian Dragon
- QGD, Lasker
- Slav, 3.Nc3 dxc4 4.e4
- Gruenfeld, Exchange
Which opening variations have been discussed so far?
Can I buy back issues?
Yes you can! At the moment we offer the complete package of
back issues 0-129 for 51,95 EUR. You can also buy separate years. In all cases, you will receive a ZIP file with all PDFs and PGNs, and also one big PGN file with all issues together - which means a
wonderful overview of the most important novelties from 2009 until now.
Ehm... can I have a look?
Here's what
ChessVibes Openings #16 (April 22, 2009) looks like:
FREE SAMPLE ISSUE - ChessVibes Openings #16 - click to download!
- What's hot? A round-up of the most important opening developments of mid-April, including statistics about the frequence and score of the Chebanenko position after 1.d4 d5 2.c4 c6 3.Nf3 Nf6 4.Nc3 a6 5.c5 Nbd7 6.Bf4 Nh5 7.Bd2 Nhf6
- What's not? This week 1.e4 e5 was hot, as the top players categorically avoided the Semi-Open Games. Interestingly, the classical 1...d5 was also much more popular than the more modern answers to 1.d4, at the FIDE Grand Prix in Nalchik.
- Game of the week "I didn't spend much time on it before the game, but I prepared seriously for this tournament and we did investigate this line", Peter Leko said at the press conference in Nalchik, after his game against Sergei Karjakin. Page two has a closer look at this highly interesting draw in the Chebanenko.
- This week's harvest For more opening ideas from the Ruy Lopez Marshall, Sicilian Taimanov, Queen's Indian and Ragozin Defence.
- Opening expert This week Rustam Kasimdzhanov is highlighted. The former FIDE World Champion and current second of Anand has a broad repertoire, switching from hypersharp openings like Dragon and Anti-Moscow to positional Queen’s Gambit lines.
FREE SAMPLE ISSUE - ChessVibes Openings #16 - click to download!What does it cost?
As a subscriber you'll receive the PDF Magazine and accompanying PGN files in your mailbox every week.A one-year subscription is € 28 (that's less than € 0.60 per issue!)
- for price in US $ click hereHow to subscribe? Click on one of the buttons:
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Payments can be done directly via Paypal, or by credit card after creating a Paypal account which takes a minute. Please drop us an email if you prefer to pay by bank transfer!
|
|
For Dutch clients it's possible to pay via iDEAL, the Dutch online bank system with which you can pay safely, secure and comfortably. |
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ChessVibes Openings and ChessVibes Training
Our other magazine
ChessVibes Training, which is 8 pages, costs € 40 a year. Not a CVT subscriber yet, and interested in getting both magazines? The two separate magazine subscriptions are 28 + 40 = 68 Euro but if you go for both you only pay
60 Euro! (
click for price in US$)
July 1, 2009: Eugene Manchester reviews ChessVibes Openings for ChessCafe
In the July 1 issue of ChessCafe's Book Review (mirror here) ChessVibes Openings was reviewed by Eugene Manchester. Some quotes:
"So, who-ya-gonna-call? Opening busters? Not quite. For the reasonable price of 25 euros per year [now 28 - CV] , once a week you can receive intelligent, interesting opening surveys and analysis presented by a team lead by Dutch IMs Merijn van Delft & Robert Ris.""The format and presentation are consistently of high quality, with variety of coverage and opening analysis.""The cost per year is roughly equivalent to a good chess book. Each week you get a four- page issue packed with opening analysis, at least two thoroughly annotated games with one or more of that week's featured openings, a glimpse into the world of the latest opening novelties, in short, a quality weekly opening report."
May 7, 2009: GM Hedinn Steingrimsson reviews ChessVibes Openings for Chess Today
In issues 3103 (Thursday, May 7) of Chess Today, the daily chess newspaper which also comes into your inbox by email in PDF, ChessVibes Openings was reviewed by GM Hedinn Steingrimsson from Iceland. Some quotes:
"What I like about ChessVibes Openings is their focus on the trend and discoveries that are revealed in super tournaments and by very strong players. It makes sense for all tournament chess players and opening theoreticians to follow these developments and getting an overview from ChessVibes Openings definitely saves time.""I find it positive that there is consistency in the openings covered so that the readers will with time have a certain repertoire available based on different theoretical articles from ChessVibes about e.g. the Anti-Moscow Variation.""For those that really want to find out how to get a better position out of the opening and are willing to enter complications and do some homework in order to succeed, ChessVibes Openings can be recommended."