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Openings

Master chess openings from first principles

Apr 08, 2026

OpeningsBlitz Opening Principles

Opening Principles for Blitz - Most Classical Rules Work Against You

Classical opening theory was built for long games, and that distinction matters more than most club players realize. The advice to control the center, develop knights before bishops, and avoid moving the same piece twice assumes you have time to think — time that simply does not exist in blitz, where FIDE rules require all moves to be completed in 10 minutes or less . Those deeply ingrained habits become liabilities the moment the clock starts burning. The solution is not to abandon opening principles entirely, but to replace them with a Minimum Viable Repertoire: a focused three-opening system designed for speed, pattern recognition, and practical results you can build in a single weekend.

Apr 07, 2026

OpeningsOpening Study Methods

Chess Opening Study Plan for Beginners - Build a Repertoire That Wins

The Oxford Companion to Chess lists 1,327 named openings and variants — a number that stops most beginners cold before they've played a single tournament game. Faced with the Sicilian Defense, the Ruy López, the King's Indian, and hundreds of alternatives, new players often respond by either memorizing random lines they found online or ignoring openings entirely and hoping for the best. Neither approach works.

Apr 02, 2026

Chess Openings - Most Beginners Study Them Way Too Deep

Beginners should study openings no deeper than 3–5 moves until they reach an Elo rating of roughly 1400. That's the concrete answer, and it applies regardless of which opening you choose. Below 1400, games are almost never decided by theoretical preparation — they're decided by blunders, missed tactics, and positional misunderstandings that no amount of memorized lines can fix. The Oxford Companion to Chess lists 1,327 named openings and variants, so chasing depth in that universe is a losing battle at this stage.