Watched this video, and literally played it (and won with it) in the next game. Appreciate it! The variation that I ran into that was not discussed here went like 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nf6 3. Bc4 Nc6 4. Ng5 d5 5. exd5 Nd4 6. d6 Qxd6 7. Nxf7 Qc6 8. d3. It gave me a bit of a headache, since I no longer had the option of threatening check on e3. I had to think for a minute, but it still ends up losing for white. The response that I had was 8... Qxg2 9. Rf1 Bg4 10. f3 Nxf3+ 11. Rxf3 Bxf3 and white ends up losing the queen or running into immediate checkmate with 12. Qd2 Qg1#.
Thanks for the fun and interesting move. I also wanted to say that I am glad I stumbled upon your video(s). You have a very clean and concise RUclips personality. No unnecessary chatter that would otherwise turn a 5-minute video into a 15-minute droning. Your dissection is also on point with just the right speed and explanation at times and slowing down just enough at others.
Kuddos Jerry! Great way in covering and explaining different scenarios with different outcomes. Most importantly, not getting people confused and making the learning process easy to understand. Short, sweet, and right to the point. Thanks!
Dude That's definetly the BEST opening I've seen well Done. My opennents always do that... I give them a lil surprise now hehe ! Congratulations again 8D
Suppose with this scenario, at 4:00 of the video, if white's bishop goes to F7 and then flights to C4, what do you foresee taking place on the board? If white's knight attacks and tries the fork, I really liked your response with black, what power!
@3:58 the bishop doesn't necessarily have to move all the way back and get captured by the knight. Instead white could play bishop c4 and maintain the light squared diagonal. If black then tries to kick away the knight with h6 white has the move knight f7 and black has no way of capturing it and a whole new line can play out.
I've discovered a nice little variant if white tries to defend the bishop, usually 8. d3 (perhaps thinking the rook is still just as trapped -> if ...Rg8 9. Nd6+). Continue with ... Qxg2. 9. Rf1... Bg4. The smart play is 10. f3, which continues the game but loses the Queen, but most people opt for for 10. Qd2, which results in a mate in 3, in 3 different paths (... Nf3+ 11. Kd1... Qxf1+ 12. Qe1... Qxe1#) (... Nf3+ 11. Ke2... Nxh2+ 12. Ke1... Qxf1#) (...Nf3+ 11. Ke2... Nxh2+ 12. Ke3... Qf3#)
I saw this trap in another video, but I love Jerry's explanation. I have used this at least 50 times to get wins. It is a fantastic trap and the opponent never sees it coming!
Because queen to C6 (Which would be blacks response) is where black wants the queen anyway, which puts pressure on the bishop and whites G2 pawn. This is actually worse for white, IMO.
At 2:20, White will often play the natural looking Nxf7, after which we see: ... Kxf7 cxd4 dxc4 Qf3+ Nf6!! Qxa8 Bc5 And black has a deadly attack to compensate for being down a rook. This is my favorite opening position and is still very unclear although my engine seems to favor black slightly.
+Ashish S Pillai Watched this video much later, but that is losing to Qxg2, if bishop takes rook its mate in 4, BxA8 Qh1, Ke2 Qe4, Kf1 Bch3, Kg1 Qg2#. If bishop takes knight queen is already on the diagonal to take back the bishop, with a suspicious pawn structure and little developement (kingside castle is also bad because of the lack of the g2 pawn)
After 6...b5, (1:47) 7.Bf1 is best by far. Not only do the databases and engines confirm this but many class A and up have been aware of this position for a while. 7.Bd3 (2:05) pretty much dumps all of whites advantage Not just going by all the engines, but in practice between class level players. It is quite unusual at all levels. In general this is an excellent video for players who play the Italian at ameteur levels. Very accurate and relevant! Kudos!
This is very reminiscent of a trap that can occur out of the "Blackburne Shilling Gambit" with 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Nd4 4. Nxe5? Qg5 5. Nxf7?? Qxg2 6. Rf1 Qxe4+ 7. Be2 Nf3 mate. Cool video Jerry, thanks :)
No he didn't. At 4:25 he just cover the other way to take the pawn. But what if after Bf7 Ke7 white does Bc4? The knight can't take the bishop so the king won't be able to defend the fork on Ng6
I realize I am a bit late, but the answer is Queen to C6. It threatens the Bishop and G2. There are a few variations after that, the best one for white results in white being down one pawn and a worse position.
At 2:53 it looks to me like the best move would be moving the white pawn to D3. The black Queen could move back, but it seems more "natural" than developing the Knight to C3.
That's a nice mate in 4 after 11.Nc3, but nobody is ever going to play Nc3 because of the more obvious ...Nxc3 which wins the queen due to the mate threat.
Cool video. It's very helpful. Lately when I play the Italian as white I've been seeing the black queen coming out early after their knight takes my kings pawn. Ultimately it leads to a quick checkmate if I'm careful. I've been trying to figure out what it's called to look it. Any idea what it is?
can i suggest? Instead of d5. what if Bc5? if Nf7 for a fork then Bf2 for a check, king takes Bishop then Knight take e4 for another check. I just thought for a counter attack
Hi, Jerry, it's also possible to set up this trap out of the schilling-kostic gambit/blackburne gambit . Would be nice if you would mention that as well in a video. Love your videos, greetings from Germany
+NaegaNova pawn push on b5, same story you need to keep attacking white without moving the queen to lure him into going ahead and land the fork because with the white knight sitting on g5 the trap wont work.
Outstanding trap, it’s funny to watch my opponents continue to gorge on the Queenside buffet only to realise they’ve walked into a trap with a devastating outcome. Used this response a fair few times, absolutely brutal. Thanks for the tutorial.
Do we need to memorize these moves or is there a theory/strategy that can help me makes and develop my own moves? I find it very hard to memorize the openings stuff.
I gave this a go a few minutes ago. Checkmated him in 10 moves when instead of moving the rook, he played Bf7 then after Ke7 played Bh5 which simply allowed Qxh1#
Thx! used this in a game on lichess.. he took with the knight and after Qc6 played d3 to stop e4 check but i still took on g2 - post taht, the attack was too much - he soon lost...
Thanks for sharing! I have been fighting against the fried liver attack quite a bit lately and have been defending with h6. I will give this one a try.
Asking that is like asking why bishop has to move at all? His bishop is guarded by the knight! As the video alr explained, h6 will scare away knight and he cannot protect the bishop anymore, so White want to get the bishop to safety
there is an interesting quirk if someone knows this trap and instead of playing Nxh8 plays Nxe5 protecting the mate threat, here you play the same until the mating move of Nf3+. If you play that white plays Nxf3 and you lose a piece. so there you play Nxc2+ and win the queen. Just an interesting thought after I fell into this counter-trap
So, I watched this at morning and just now, I played the game with Two Knighs Defence. And I decided to try this hoping that I remember the line. And I did, the game didn't look fully like in the video, but I managed to get a good attack out of this trap :) 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Nf6 4. Ng5 d5 5. exd5 Nd4 6. d6 Qxd6 7. Nxf7 Qc6 8. d3 Qxg2 9. Rf1 Nf3+ 10. Ke2 Bg4 11. Ke3 Bc5+ 12. d4 Nxd4 13. Rg1 Qe4+ 0-1
move 7 why when you move queen to attack the bishop why doesnt the white castle and then take rook with knight ...then he is in a safe and still pretty deadly position thats a line you didnt go over since the position is changed alot
Any Traxler counter attack fans in the house? I'm curious, would you go for the trap shown here or the traxler when facing the fried liver? Just trying to broaden my chess horizons :)
Hey, I have won a game with this trap! But in that game he didn't capture my room with his knight, but make a random move and I sacrificed my knight and won his queen! Thanks for this helpful video
This ends in much the same way as the Blackburne shilling gambit, another natural looking trap black plays against the Italian game. Not 3. ... Nf6, but instead 3. ... Nd4 and then if white takes the pawn and proceeds with the fork, it results in the same huge material losses for white or a very quick smothered mate. Definitely worth checking out! :)
OHHHH someone played that last variation on me, but after Qc6, he didn't play Nxh8, he played Bb5. It forced me to respond with Nxb5. Then he played Nxh8, and although I was able to play Qxg2 anyway, the knight was now out of place and it deviated from there. I did win eventually, but it didn't seem decisive.
Jerry, I do not know how to thank you for the videos you post. Anyway, I'm very grateful for that! This video will be very helpful! Thank you! Oh, I played against you in the last tournament and I was very happy with it. ;-)
I know this is late, like years late. But thank you for sharing this. A lot of low skill players go for this quick move. Which I kinda loath. I have mated my first person who done this and told them to look you up. Great counter. Again thank you. Also, I mated him in 15 seconds because I knew 😅👌🏼
Can a fork backfire? :)
Thank you in advance for any +1's/likes/shares etc...
Enjoy!
I am a low rated player and see this bishop knight attack almost every other day. Nice to have this line in my pocket now.
Adam Landa Me too. I saw this attack so much that I started playing the French defense against 1. e4. Most low rated players don't know what to do!
Only in Darkcoin.
Literally used this trap the same day you posted the video. Poor guy didn't have any idea how everything went so bad so quickly lol
This is a mess of an opening..lol
If the fork fails just try it with a spoon
I only have a knife, will that work?
Nathan Apex maybe a spork?
..
Nathan Apex knife f5 - ben finegold approved
😂
Watched this video, and literally played it (and won with it) in the next game. Appreciate it!
The variation that I ran into that was not discussed here went like 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nf6 3. Bc4 Nc6 4. Ng5 d5 5. exd5 Nd4 6. d6 Qxd6 7. Nxf7 Qc6 8. d3. It gave me a bit of a headache, since I no longer had the option of threatening check on e3. I had to think for a minute, but it still ends up losing for white. The response that I had was 8... Qxg2 9. Rf1 Bg4 10. f3 Nxf3+ 11. Rxf3 Bxf3 and white ends up losing the queen or running into immediate checkmate with 12. Qd2 Qg1#.
great
Shadrach Hepner I played a game with those exact moves (I was black)
Wow I had the same line. I had no idea what to after d3. but as soon as I played Qxg2 my opponent resigned.
Thanks for the fun and interesting move. I also wanted to say that I am glad I stumbled upon your video(s). You have a very clean and concise RUclips personality. No unnecessary chatter that would otherwise turn a 5-minute video into a 15-minute droning. Your dissection is also on point with just the right speed and explanation at times and slowing down just enough at others.
Wow, that's an awesome counter-fork trap, great stuff jerry, never seen this before
this opening for white is very popular in noob chess
you`re calling Bobby Fisher a noob ? because he used to play this
valentijnraw You just kind've proved the point. hence 'used' any player has less experience from the past,. hence 'noob'.
SpeedDemon The fried liver attack is not a "noob" opening. There is a deep theory for that.
I never said it was :p
it is not a noob opening. it has been studied and played by GMs for a long time :D
Finally a good opening that is flexible AND practical. I can honestly see every one of these moves being made by beginners (like myself, lol).
Kuddos Jerry! Great way in covering and explaining different scenarios with different outcomes. Most importantly, not getting people confused and making the learning process easy to understand. Short, sweet, and right to the point. Thanks!
hey man, I want to congratulate you on this awesome channel!!!
I like that you are direct to the point and very dinamic in explaining.
Very well explained! I knew about this trap before but didn't know all the other variants.
Thanks NH :)
Dude That's definetly the BEST opening I've seen well Done.
My opennents always do that... I give them a lil surprise now hehe !
Congratulations again 8D
Suppose with this scenario, at 4:00 of the video, if white's bishop goes to F7 and then flights to C4, what do you foresee taking place on the board? If white's knight attacks and tries the fork, I really liked your response with black, what power!
@3:58 the bishop doesn't necessarily have to move all the way back and get captured by the knight. Instead white could play bishop c4 and maintain the light squared diagonal. If black then tries to kick away the knight with h6 white has the move knight f7 and black has no way of capturing it and a whole new line can play out.
thank you for the clear explanations with the graphics making it even clearer. good job.
I've discovered a nice little variant if white tries to defend the bishop, usually 8. d3 (perhaps thinking the rook is still just as trapped -> if ...Rg8 9. Nd6+). Continue with ... Qxg2. 9. Rf1... Bg4. The smart play is 10. f3, which continues the game but loses the Queen, but most people opt for for 10. Qd2, which results in a mate in 3, in 3 different paths (... Nf3+ 11. Kd1... Qxf1+ 12. Qe1... Qxe1#) (... Nf3+ 11. Ke2... Nxh2+ 12. Ke1... Qxf1#) (...Nf3+ 11. Ke2... Nxh2+ 12. Ke3... Qf3#)
I saw this trap in another video, but I love Jerry's explanation. I have used this at least 50 times to get wins. It is a fantastic trap and the opponent never sees it coming!
3:57 Why wouldn't bishop c4 instead of b3?
Because queen to C6 (Which would be blacks response) is where black wants the queen anyway, which puts pressure on the bishop and whites G2 pawn. This is actually worse for white, IMO.
At 2:20, White will often play the natural looking Nxf7, after which we see:
... Kxf7
cxd4 dxc4
Qf3+ Nf6!!
Qxa8 Bc5
And black has a deadly attack to compensate for being down a rook. This is my favorite opening position and is still very unclear although my engine seems to favor black slightly.
Am I missing something around the 1:56 mark on move 9 if 9.Qa4+ white will also pick up the c pawn and be two pawns up right?
after bishop b5 check,if white plays bishop c6 instead of castling black loses a minor piece!!!(refer 2:30)
+Ashish S Pillai Watched this video much later, but that is losing to Qxg2, if bishop takes rook its mate in 4, BxA8 Qh1, Ke2 Qe4, Kf1 Bch3, Kg1 Qg2#. If bishop takes knight queen is already on the diagonal to take back the bishop, with a suspicious pawn structure and little developement (kingside castle is also bad because of the lack of the g2 pawn)
3:59 what if instead of Bb3 white goes Bc4? What does black respond with then... btw i'm a noob.
...Qc6 hit both bishop and g2 pawn. If Bf1, black can capture on c2 giving a fork himself.
After 6...b5, (1:47) 7.Bf1 is best by far. Not only do the databases and engines confirm this but many class A and up have been aware of this position for a while. 7.Bd3 (2:05) pretty much dumps all of whites advantage Not just going by all the engines, but in practice between class level players. It is quite unusual at all levels. In general this is an excellent video for players who play the Italian at ameteur levels. Very accurate and relevant! Kudos!
This is very reminiscent of a trap that can occur out of the "Blackburne Shilling Gambit" with 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Nd4 4. Nxe5? Qg5 5. Nxf7?? Qxg2 6. Rf1 Qxe4+ 7. Be2 Nf3 mate. Cool video Jerry, thanks :)
0:57 b4? I've seen it before.
What if at 3:59 bishop goes back to c4?
4:25 he covered that
No he didn't. At 4:25 he just cover the other way to take the pawn. But what if after Bf7 Ke7 white does Bc4? The knight can't take the bishop so the king won't be able to defend the fork on Ng6
I realize I am a bit late, but the answer is Queen to C6. It threatens the Bishop and G2. There are a few variations after that, the best one for white results in white being down one pawn and a worse position.
At 2:53 it looks to me like the best move would be moving the white pawn to D3. The black Queen could move back, but it seems more "natural" than developing the Knight to C3.
I do play this line to land a fork as white, never knew it can back fire so easily. Now i know better.
you can also check out the traxler counter attack
This is so helpful. I run into this position all the time
That's a nice mate in 4 after 11.Nc3, but nobody is ever going to play Nc3 because of the more obvious ...Nxc3 which wins the queen due to the mate threat.
Saw the same. Hence it's no "natural" move at all.
Yeah 11. Qf3 has been played 2,264 and the second most popular move 11. d3 leads to the mate but was only played 465 times :/
I loved it when he said
you have to either give up the Queen or the king
+Gus Cox Decisions ...decisions... 🤓
At 2:22 you have give pxN instead of Nxf7!! which leads to KxN PxN and Black has all but lost control of this opening and is certaily worse.
4:30 what if Bc4?
Cool video. It's very helpful. Lately when I play the Italian as white I've been seeing the black queen coming out early after their knight takes my kings pawn. Ultimately it leads to a quick checkmate if I'm careful. I've been trying to figure out what it's called to look it. Any idea what it is?
The Kostic Trap. Concise presentation without any excessive verbiage.
What if at 4:43 white castles?
can i suggest? Instead of d5. what if Bc5? if Nf7 for a fork then Bf2 for a check, king takes Bishop then Knight take e4 for another check. I just thought for a counter attack
3:06, how about Black Nxc6 to get Queen and possible checkmate?
Wow! Thank you so much! My opponent elected to give up the king in the EXACT sequence you outlined here:
Be2 to block the Qe4+, Ne3#! So cool!
Hi, Jerry, it's also possible to set up this trap out of the schilling-kostic gambit/blackburne gambit . Would be nice if you would mention that as well in a video.
Love your videos, greetings from Germany
In the last variation, why did White's bishop retreat to b3 instead of c4?
+NaegaNova pawn push on b5, same story you need to keep attacking white without moving the queen to lure him into going ahead and land the fork because with the white knight sitting on g5 the trap wont work.
2:23 How about something more forcing for white like 8. Nxf7. Kxf7. 9. cxd4... displacing the king?
Very educational video, congrats. Where can I find the chess sortware your using?
Finally, after that dreaded e4, Nf3, Bc4 progression. There's this one player that always gets me with his favorite opening.
the bishop would probably not go home but after the queen and rook fork, Nf3#, opponent would never see that coming.
Knight 2 f-4 is the key then reference CASTLE before pawn pressure ?
but how can black be in a better position if he doesnt castle?
and why not knight c3 at 4:09?
Wow, I really live this idea, especially with the regularity that I see this from White. Thanks for sharing!
Outstanding trap, it’s funny to watch my opponents continue to gorge on the Queenside buffet only to realise they’ve walked into a trap with a devastating outcome. Used this response a fair few times, absolutely brutal. Thanks for the tutorial.
Do we need to memorize these moves or is there a theory/strategy that can help me makes and develop my own moves? I find it very hard to memorize the openings stuff.
I gave this a go a few minutes ago. Checkmated him in 10 moves when instead of moving the rook, he played Bf7 then after Ke7 played Bh5 which simply allowed Qxh1#
Thx! used this in a game on lichess.. he took with the knight and after Qc6 played d3 to stop e4 check but i still took on g2 - post taht, the attack was too much - he soon lost...
Thanks Jerry! Will watch this a couple of times for sure
Would love to see this in a blitz chess match of yours!
nice flag :D - Kosova eshteShqipria e madhe
Hi Mr Jerry
I'd be so thankful if you continue this series of chess Traps adding more videos thank you very much for these nice videos
Hi ChessNetwork my question is what if on the 8th move white takes the pawn on e5 instead of taking the rook on h8?
Fantastic! Just watched this video, go to play a game and guess what happens...put this to instant use for an easy win. Thanks Jerry!
No way! :) So d6 with Nxf7 to follow was played? :)
ChessNetwork Yep, exactly =) A little bit too greedy from white, and won the game in 10 turns. Its nice when a plan comes together.
same story, italian game and won with the knight on f3 mate haha
wow jerry... I have never seen this trap before. This is revolutionary Jerry! This trap is going down in the history of chess.
brilliant. thats the same ending as the blackburn shilling gambit. which also works well to counter this at the very start.
isnt bc4 more realistic at 3 :59?
Bb3 is better, because if Bc4, there's Qc6!
Bro this video is amazing thanks really helped alot i be watched alot of tutorials but this is by far one of the best!
Thanks for sharing! I have been fighting against the fried liver attack quite a bit lately and have been defending with h6. I will give this one a try.
Excellent Thanks...
One thing if 4. Instead of Ng5 4.d4 e5xd4 5.Ng5 Then ???
@2:20 knight could not take on D5 because that pawn already advanced to d6 before your bishop went to F1.
when black played b5 the threat is again open f7, which means b5 is not a good move
@could you clarify on this please @ChessNetwork
Awesome great work in explaining both sides.
Thank you, Two knights defense and the Fried liver are driving me insane. Nice video
After the white bishop takes on f7, why can't white play 8. Bc4 instead of Bb3? Doesn't that avoid the black counterattack?
3:58 - Why can't he move to C4?
Asking that is like asking why bishop has to move at all? His bishop is guarded by the knight! As the video alr explained, h6 will scare away knight and he cannot protect the bishop anymore, so White want to get the bishop to safety
there is an interesting quirk if someone knows this trap and instead of playing Nxh8 plays Nxe5 protecting the mate threat, here you play the same until the mating move of Nf3+. If you play that white plays Nxf3 and you lose a piece. so there you play Nxc2+ and win the queen. Just an interesting thought after I fell into this counter-trap
I love these, hopefully there'll be more in the future
i just realize,how about If white castled then what's the move? rook to g8?
Hey could you please do more blitz commentaries (not vs computer)? they're my favourite content from you
he did a stream last night so there should be stuff soon hopefully. :)
So, I watched this at morning and just now, I played the game with Two Knighs Defence. And I decided to try this hoping that I remember the line. And I did, the game didn't look fully like in the video, but I managed to get a good attack out of this trap :)
1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Nf6 4. Ng5 d5 5. exd5 Nd4 6. d6 Qxd6 7. Nxf7 Qc6 8. d3 Qxg2 9. Rf1 Nf3+ 10. Ke2 Bg4 11. Ke3 Bc5+ 12. d4 Nxd4 13. Rg1 Qe4+ 0-1
Too bad you didn't make a video with commentary... next time?
I don't do those :) I am not that good of a chess player for that to be useful to anyone ;)
Gadzinisko
Love the abrupt ending to let it settle in haha, There are a few good videos on similar openings/traps by thechesswebsite
move 7 why when you move queen to attack the bishop why doesnt the white castle and then take rook with knight ...then he is in a safe and still pretty deadly position thats a line you didnt go over since the position is changed alot
or well i guess the position is pretty close but still would love to know the counter
I showed my "chess teacher" the trap but he told me the same thing castling on move 7 i did not know what too do :(
You take white’s bishop and let him take your rook, as there is no way for white to save his knight, so itll be two pieces for the rook
Any Traxler counter attack fans in the house? I'm curious, would you go for the trap shown here or the traxler when facing the fried liver? Just trying to broaden my chess horizons :)
Very well explained - thank you.
Favourite trap video thus far, very nice :)
How can anyone not like this video? Thanks mate, succinct and interesting.
Hey, I have won a game with this trap! But in that game he didn't capture my room with his knight, but make a random move and I sacrificed my knight and won his queen! Thanks for this helpful video
I always play the Two Knights against the Italian. This is a wonderful addition to my repertoire :)
Jerry I found black's responses to white's attacks eye opening ending in checkmate and white loses
Unfortunately for white, it's game over. The sound of your voice when you say that tho...
Thanks so much for, everyone plays that white opening and I can't wait to be like BAM two knights defense trap!!!
Thanks, Jerry, for bringing the traps back :D
Thanks again for another helpful video!
Thumbs way up!
Tim
Wow......
I was trapped in these moves many a times... But didn't found this continuation...
Surely will try it out
This ends in much the same way as the Blackburne shilling gambit, another natural looking trap black plays against the Italian game. Not 3. ... Nf6, but instead 3. ... Nd4 and then if white takes the pawn and proceeds with the fork, it results in the same huge material losses for white or a very quick smothered mate. Definitely worth checking out! :)
Awesome! Thanks for the lesson
Great defense, thank you sir!
I've been getting absolutely abused by the fried liver by playing NxD5 so I went to see if you had anything, and sure enough you did. I love it.
OHHHH someone played that last variation on me, but after Qc6, he didn't play Nxh8, he played Bb5. It forced me to respond with Nxb5. Then he played Nxh8, and although I was able to play Qxg2 anyway, the knight was now out of place and it deviated from there. I did win eventually, but it didn't seem decisive.
very helpful! I see this opening by white around 10% of the time when playing at a rating of ~1200
That is an awesome trap, thank you sir, I mated my friend right after I watched it. Fantastic!
Classic Fritz Variation. I love this variation so much - love to punish people for trying the fried liver attack, since Ng5 is a weak move.
Wow. Thanks for that analysis!
Jerry, I do not know how to thank you for the videos you post. Anyway, I'm very grateful for that! This video will be very helpful! Thank you! Oh, I played against you in the last tournament and I was very happy with it. ;-)
What if after Qc6 white castles?
I know this is late, like years late. But thank you for sharing this. A lot of low skill players go for this quick move. Which I kinda loath. I have mated my first person who done this and told them to look you up. Great counter. Again thank you. Also, I mated him in 15 seconds because I knew 😅👌🏼
What if white castles after 5.exd5 Nd4 ??
beginning a game I move knight he move knight, I move knight he move knight what should I do next?
+Christopher Prater resign