35 Vital Chess Principles | Opening, Middlegame, and Endgame Principles - Chess Strategy and Ideas

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  • Опубликовано: 3 фев 2021
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    About This Video:
    Clear and easy to follow, WITH EXAMPLES - the top 35 chess principles that EVERY chess player needs to know. These chess principles cover the opening, middlegame and endgame. Chess opening principles are crucial to help you get off to a good start. Chess middlegame principles are vital throughout the game. Chess endgame principles are important to finish off the game properly. These chess principles will take your chess strategy to the next level. These chess concepts and ideas are crucial to how to improve at chess. One of the best ways to improve your chess strategy, is to learn these important chess principles. These chess strategies will help your chess rating grow very rapidly. These chess principles are beneficial to beginners, intermediate chess players and advanced chess players as well. There are some beginner chess principles, some intermediate chess principles, and some advanced chess principles.
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Комментарии • 2,9 тыс.

  • @ChessVibesOfficial
    @ChessVibesOfficial  2 года назад +522

    Stuck at 1000 elo? Not anymore: chessvibescourses.thinkific.com/

    • @johnny196775
      @johnny196775 2 года назад +17

      I am curious if you mean this for beginners, or, if you don't intend this for absolute beginners, why would you suggest castling is a vital principle, let alone in the first ten moves?
      I thought you were doing great until then. Perhaps it is a generational thing (I am 56); I admit I haven't even watched a game in decades, so maybe state of play has changed so dramatically that it is necessary now?
      Also, in the 70's a night was worth 3.5 while a bishop was worth 3. I bishop is limited to half the board. Nights can reach every square. I don't know where you learned that bishops are worth more than nights, but if that is what people think today, I should get back into play and clean the place up!
      What a joke.

    • @kendricklamarlover247
      @kendricklamarlover247 2 года назад +20

      @@johnny196775 typically bishops are regarded as being more valuable since 1. They can traverse the board in one move and 2. They can protect more squares then the knight can and that's even better when you have the bishop pair, while knights have to jump, skip and hop to get across the board and can't protect more than four squares at a time

    • @johnny196775
      @johnny196775 2 года назад +7

      @@kendricklamarlover247 If that is what they are telling young chess players, then I should get back into the game and clean the place up... because that is very poor reasoning.

    • @ednelson2501
      @ednelson2501 2 года назад +3

      @@kendricklamarlover247 I see bishops and knights as, equal value. A bishop's defensive style is only matched by a queen. A knight has it's own abilities. I see both knights as, more like specialized defensive pieces. That balances, for what they change on attack. Where they are specialized attack, hold position pieces.

    • @PaulRees77
      @PaulRees77 2 года назад +19

      @@johnny196775 Bishops have been considered a little more valuable than knights since way before the 70's. This is not a new idea.

  • @rvqx
    @rvqx 2 года назад +5962

    I don´t play hope-chess, i play hopeless chess.

    • @bastawa
      @bastawa 2 года назад +46

      same here!

    • @aesaehttr
      @aesaehttr 2 года назад +278

      "I'm going to move here...i hope he doesn't see it!"
      -Ben Finegold

    • @bastawa4569
      @bastawa4569 2 года назад +254

      @@aesaehttr In my case it's like: I already moved, I hadn't seen how bad it was. I hope the opponent won't see it!

    • @indyjoe6
      @indyjoe6 2 года назад +14

      Lol

    • @drewpocernich2540
      @drewpocernich2540 2 года назад +14

      @@bastawa4569 same.

  • @teoflandoliokeefe5483
    @teoflandoliokeefe5483 2 года назад +9659

    One good tip that I've realized after years of playing is that you should think of Chess as a single player game, and therefore always plan out the moves for both sides. It can be easy to tunnel vision on your own side, but if you always prepare yourself by thinking "what would I do if i were my opponent" you often can perform better and formulate more complex ideas.

    • @jasonbaxter1201
      @jasonbaxter1201 2 года назад +129

      But what about the time?

    • @aaronlui8477
      @aaronlui8477 2 года назад +298

      @@jasonbaxter1201 just play longer games :)

    • @ventsyv
      @ventsyv 2 года назад +99

      3 minor pieces vs queen - I think most casual players would prefer having a queen as it's easier to play.

    • @shriram9933
      @shriram9933 2 года назад +41

      @@ventsyv yes queen can hang around the whole board and give different sort of forks, when position opens up

    • @daddydealz6088
      @daddydealz6088 2 года назад +16

      Same goes for poker for poker has a more mental game than chess is more of an intellectual game poker is a game with intelligence but you also have to be able to understand the way normal people think and you can win based off of other people's emotion I would say chess has the second most intellectual game after poker

  • @LudosErgoSum
    @LudosErgoSum Год назад +193

    I want to add: 36. Don't play "Defence chess" which is essentially you trying to NOT LOSE. You only defend and try to protect and preserve your pieces, but there's no attacks or any goal to checkmate your opponent. I see this in a lot of players that are afraid of losing.

    • @rewdwarf123
      @rewdwarf123 Год назад +4

      Unless, of course, it sucks your opponent in and you then counter-attack.

    • @AntheInEcht
      @AntheInEcht Год назад

      @@rewdwarf123 or your name is Petrosjan

    • @mikyl-fo8rh
      @mikyl-fo8rh Год назад +1

      Strong offense is best defense as you have your opponent defensive rather than offense.

    • @MimMdance
      @MimMdance 5 месяцев назад +1

      Against a good player you can become trapped by your own pieces, suffocated, which is such a frustrating way to lose. I rather go all out.

    • @angrypidgeon1714
      @angrypidgeon1714 4 месяца назад +2

      wrong. These are tactical principles. Strategic principles are Sun Tzu. Therefore the warrior shall place himself beyond the posibility of defeat, and the opponent will present the opportunity for victory (by mistakes). However a good defense is an offense, or rather taking of strategic points. Strategic points are places of most options

  • @8stormy5
    @8stormy5 Год назад +123

    I also love Levy Rozman's principles of "Checks, Captures, Attacks" for analysis importance, and "disprove the move" in calculation (the latter basically means you should never justify how a move could succeed, but instead justify why the move can't fail)

  • @snookabooka1
    @snookabooka1 3 года назад +5212

    1. Control the center of board
    2. Develop pieces quickly
    3. Knights before bishops
    4. Dont move same piece twice in opening
    5. No queen too early
    6. Castle before move 10
    7. Connect rooks
    8. Rooks should go on open or half open files
    9. Knights on the rim are grim
    10. Avoid double pawns
    11. Avoid isolated pawns
    12. Avoid backward pawns
    13. Dont trade bishop for knight
    14. Avoid moving pawns in front of castle king
    15. Dont open center if king is still there
    16. 2 minor pieces are better than rook+pawn
    17. 3 minors is better than queen
    18. Rooks are strong on 7th or 2nd rank
    19. Doubled rooks on open file are very strong
    20. Bishops are better in open, knight-closed
    21.deal with attack on flank with atk on cntr
    22. Capture toward cntr with pawns
    23. End game, king is valuable
    24. Rooks go behind passed pawn
    25. 2 connected pawns on 6th rank beats rook
    26. Atk base of pawn chain
    27. Knights are best blockaders of pawns
    28. If position is cramped, trade pieces
    29. When ahead, trade pieces but not pawns
    30. When down, trade pawns but not pieces
    31. Opposite colored bishop pieces dangerous
    32. End game, games are drawish
    33. Dont play hope chess
    34. When you see good move, stop and look for better move
    35. Know right time to ignore principles

  • @isaachimself
    @isaachimself 2 года назад +2794

    0:46 Principle 1 - Control Center
    0:57 Principle 2 - Develop Pieces
    1:16 Principle 3 - Knights before bishops
    1:24 Principle 4 - Don't move the same piece 2 times, while developing
    1:36 Principle 5 - Don't bring queen out too early
    2:03 Principle 6 - Castle Before move 10
    2:16 Principle 7 - Connect your Rooks
    2:33 Principle 8 - Rooks should go on open or half open files
    3:09 Principle 9 - Knights on the Rim are Grim
    3:25 Principle 10 - Try avoiding doubled Pawns
    3:56 Principle 11 - Avoid Isolated Pawns and Double Isolated Pawns
    4:26 Principle 12 - Avoid Backward Pawns
    4:49 Principle 13 - Don't trade your bishop for knight; without good reason
    5:27 Principle 14 - Avoid moving the pawns in front of your castled king
    5:50 Principle 15 - Don't open the center if your king is not castled
    6:12 Principle 16 - 2 minor pieces (Knights/Bishops) are generally than 1 Rook and 1 Pawn
    6:44 Principle 17 - 3 minor pieces is better than a Queen
    6:55 Principle 18 - Rooks are very strong on the 7th rank
    7:19 Principle 19 - Doubled Rooks on an open file are Very Strong
    7:38 Principle 20 - Bishops are better in open positions -Knights are better in closed positions
    8:16 Principle 21 - Best way to deal with flank attack is counter attack the center
    8:39 Principle 22 - Capture towards center of board
    9:03 Principle 23 - Utilize King during end game
    9:22 Principle 24 - Rooks go behind Passed Pawns
    10:00 Principle 25 - 2 Connected Passed Pawns on the 6th rank Will beat a Rook
    11:06 Principle 26 - Attack Base of Pawn Chain
    11:31 Principle 27 - Knights are best blockaders of Pawns
    12:00 Principle 28 - If Position cramped, Trade Pieces
    Principle 29 went on vacation
    12:39 Principle 30 - When Ahead material, Trade Pieces but not Pawns
    13:17 Principle 31 - When Down material, Trade Pawns but not Pieces
    13:57 Principle 32 - Opposite colored bishops are dangerous in middle game
    - 15:15 Opposite colored bishops are draw-ish in end game
    15:43 Principle 33 - Don't play "Hope chess"
    16:44 Principle 34 - When you see good move - Pause and look for better move
    17:11 Principle 35 - Know when to go against Principles

    • @ibrabazzara8765
      @ibrabazzara8765 2 года назад +98

      despite watching this many times, I’ve just noticed that principle No 29 has really gone on vacation 😂😂😂

    • @SnowBoy1008
      @SnowBoy1008 2 года назад +18

      Principle 29 might be vice versa of 28

    • @962Pixels
      @962Pixels 2 года назад +44

      17:55 Principle 29 - Trade your passive pieces for your opponent's active pieces.
      (In the spreadsheet) Even though it surely did go on vacation...

    • @reginagoodbody213
      @reginagoodbody213 Год назад +3

      Principle 31: didn't he say rather trade pieces than pawns?

    • @Luke-ot1ql
      @Luke-ot1ql Год назад +1

      👍

  • @alkaholic4848
    @alkaholic4848 8 месяцев назад +25

    Also don't forget to try to force your opponent into breaking the principles.
    Eg try to put them under pressure to double up their pawns, try to pressure them into moving their knights to the edge of the board, pressure them into moving the same piece multiple times during the opening, etc.

    • @yoobyoob2764
      @yoobyoob2764 6 дней назад +1

      when you're in 100 elo, you don't even have to put pressure, they do that on their own lol (me included)

  • @oscarwaterman6137
    @oscarwaterman6137 Год назад +438

    My elaborate notes
    *General principles*
    Look for a better move when you see a good move
    Know the right times when to ignore chess principles (so basically know why you use the principles)
    *Opening*
    Control the center
    Go for kings safety
    Develop pieces: first knight, then bisschop, queen not immediately because you may have to move your queen and you miss out on the chance to develop other pieces
    Develop pieces on side you want to castle
    When developing your pieces, don’t move already developed pieces if possible
    Connecting rooks is powerful after you have castled and you have developed your pieces
    *Middle Game*
    Put rooks on open files or half open files (half open file is file with one pawn)
    knights have more options in the centre
    Avoid double pawns (two pawns on the same file)
    Avoid isolated pawns (if no pawn is next to his file)
    Avoid backward pawns (pawns that have no protection from side pawns)
    Don’t trade bishop for knight without good reason
    Avoid moving pawns in front of castled king
    Don’t open up the center if your king is still centered (because your king can get exposed)
    2 minor pieces are better than rook and pawn
    3 minor pieces are better than queen
    Rook is strong on 7th rank
    Double rook on open file is strong (e.g., can prevent opponent from placing rook on open file)
    Bishops are better in an open game, knights are better in closed game (closed game can be a game with pawns that block bishop lines)
    Deal with a flank attack (from pawns) with a counter attack in the center
    Capture towards the center if you have the option to capture a piece with two pawns
    Attack the base pawn of a pawn chain (pawns that are protected by each other)
    Trade pieces to open up a cramped position (when pieces are blockaded and can not move)
    Opposite coloured bishops are dangerous in the middle game because you can not do anything with your bishops against his bishop. His bishop with his queen are particularly dangerous
    *Endgame*
    It is strong to protect passed pawn (= a pawn that could walk freely to 8th rank) with a backward rook
    2 connected pawns (= two passed pawns next to each other on the same rank) always beat a rookand one pawn gets a queen.
    Knights are good to blockade passed pawns
    Trade pieces when you are up in material but don’t trade pawns. E.g., if you are up 2 points in material with a rook against a knight, the rook becomes more valuable after you trade pieces because it can then capture pawns.
    - The opposite of that is also true, try to trade pawns when you’re down material
    In endgame, opposite coloured bishops (without queen in the game) can easily result in draw

    • @mzukhology5177
      @mzukhology5177 Год назад +9

      Tnank you for these, i have copied them. I will go over the tips and practice. I have always been sad that no one has ever taught me how to play chess. Then a few days ago it hit me: THE INTERNET!!! Again, Thank you.

    • @davidramljak9961
      @davidramljak9961 Год назад +14

      For the end game the 2 connected pawns ONLY beat a rook if they are both on the 6th rank, otherwise rook takes them. Other than that very nice summary!

    • @phichetc5300
      @phichetc5300 Год назад

      2111111111212

    • @ACE-yo1in
      @ACE-yo1in 8 месяцев назад

      ✔️

    • @3300flavio
      @3300flavio 7 месяцев назад

      Thanks

  • @lemagicienannonyme7289
    @lemagicienannonyme7289 2 года назад +291

    I'm playing hope-hope-chess : hoping my opponent plays hope-chess and then blunders

  • @rhyspowell9426
    @rhyspowell9426 2 года назад +251

    Principle 5: Dont move your queen too early
    Nelson: So i took that personally

    • @HOWITZER169
      @HOWITZER169 2 года назад +8

      Yo I got that reference xD

    • @aesaehttr
      @aesaehttr 2 года назад +2

      When i beat that guy i took a screen shot and posted it to Facebook. Lol

    • @moltenshard
      @moltenshard 2 года назад +3

      Chess Vibes’ name is also Nelson lol 😄

    • @martinplayer2348
      @martinplayer2348 2 года назад

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @martinplayer2348
      @martinplayer2348 2 года назад

      @@aesaehttr I also beated him😂

  • @mbc-xe8rb
    @mbc-xe8rb Год назад +114

    For a ""beginner+" player like me this was a perfect video. Clear, logical, and brief/helpful explanations! Thank you so much! 👍

  • @brenorocha6687
    @brenorocha6687 Год назад +35

    I've been trying to play against a chess app in the level hard and had been repeatedly beaten by it in the opening. On my first game after watching this video I did significantly better. Thank you!

  • @brettswanson7914
    @brettswanson7914 3 года назад +399

    Great list!
    I can totally relate to #34 "When you see a good move, look for a better move".
    Against lower-level players, I have often turned a winning game into a draw with a single move. Other times, I have excitedly taken a piece only to be checkmated on the next move. Ugh!
    Never let your let your guard down in a game of chess. As GothamChess said, "chess is a game of one blunder".

    • @ChessVibesOfficial
      @ChessVibesOfficial  3 года назад +33

      Haha exactly right

    • @ChidiUma
      @ChidiUma 2 года назад +53

      Nah fam. Mine’s a game of 9 blunders

    • @aesaehttr
      @aesaehttr 2 года назад +16

      One blunder lol true. Savielly Tartakower was quoted for saying: "the winner is he who makes the next-to-last mistake." The opposite attitude is also true. David Bronstein was quoted for saying: "in chess, as in life, opportunity strikes but once."

    • @rondid
      @rondid 2 года назад +6

      When I see a good move move I mostly play it and don't look for a better one, maybe I'm wrong but clock's ticking and I think it's best to play a good move than overthink and get flagged. Time management is a big issue for me.

    • @andycopeland7051
      @andycopeland7051 2 года назад

      @@ChidiUma hahahahaha me too

  • @vanessajazp6341
    @vanessajazp6341 2 года назад +536

    Whenever your opponent has a single bishop in the end game, you neutralize it by keeping your king off of that bishop’s color (as much as possible).

    • @moosakt8876
      @moosakt8876 2 года назад +38

      very good tip, Learned it from my expierience

    • @Dodo-ur7cq
      @Dodo-ur7cq 2 года назад +5

      @Rusty Highlander yes, not just king but the other pieces

    • @zorkan111
      @zorkan111 2 года назад +36

      ​@Rusty Highlander No, not pawns. If the opponent has only one bishop, most of the time it's better to keep your pawns on the same color as the opponents bishop. Pawns control squares on diagonals, just like bishops do, so if you form pawn chains on the opponents bishops color, you severely limit them.
      Likewise, if you only have one bishop, try to arrange your pawns on the opposite color of your bishop. That way your bishop won't get cramped by your pawns.
      That leads into another point. The strength of the bishop largely depends on the pawn structure, so when an opportunity to trade bishops arises, look at the pawns to judge the value of that trade.

    • @anshik.k.t
      @anshik.k.t 2 года назад +5

      Can someone tell what to do if opponents rook is taking my pieces one by one?

    • @zorkan111
      @zorkan111 2 года назад +11

      @@anshik.k.t Don't leave your pieces undefended.

  • @davidwhite2465
    @davidwhite2465 11 месяцев назад +8

    That was really valuable. I knew just about all these rules, but really useful to see them all together. A couple of them, such as three minor pieces are better than a queen, I had suspected, but wasn’t sure. A couple of them, such as when to exchange pieces and when to exchange pawns, was new. Great video. Keep it up!

  • @twinpeaksVVV
    @twinpeaksVVV 6 месяцев назад +16

    I would add Principle #36. Always think twice before moving a pawn because you can't move it back. If you make a poor move with your other pieces you can move them back, but pawns only go forwards. A lot of beginners make pawn moves when they can't think of any other moves and often they do it with little thought. I think beginners tend to underestimate their pawns.

    • @lezty
      @lezty 4 месяца назад

      Most important principle is not move your King pawn until you're high enough in ELO

    • @Marsbars-iz3iv
      @Marsbars-iz3iv 4 месяца назад

      Im new to chess and what do you mean by that other than the obvious?​@@lezty

  • @-ChrisD
    @-ChrisD 2 года назад +313

    This is one of the best beginner level instructional/informational videos I've seen. Spoken very clearly and well articulated. Great job!

  • @KumarBendrake
    @KumarBendrake 2 года назад +498

    I really enjoyed how you were thorough yet succinct. 35 important principles in less than 20 minutes. Great job.

  • @alastairdivers4069
    @alastairdivers4069 Год назад +5

    Thorough, yet succinct. And as others have said, well articulated. Really enjoyed this video and no doubt will come back to it. Thanks for your work here.
    Haven't played in decades and only as a kid. Now keen to learn to play properly and teach my niece and nephew!

  • @LibreChess
    @LibreChess 5 месяцев назад +4

    Wow, this is incredibly insightful! Thank you, Nelson for breaking down those principles in such a clear way.

  • @TonyMontana-tm7ul
    @TonyMontana-tm7ul 2 года назад +242

    This is one of the best explanations chess videos I've seen

    • @ChessVibesOfficial
      @ChessVibesOfficial  2 года назад +24

      Glad it was helpful!

    • @aaronsahipakka3224
      @aaronsahipakka3224 2 года назад +9

      This! Most people just assume that chess newbies know every term etc., this guy explained everything very clearly and quickly. Earned my like

    • @HM-yq3cn
      @HM-yq3cn 2 года назад +4

      no doubt

    • @RachelWangCal
      @RachelWangCal 2 года назад

      AGREE

  • @RR11333
    @RR11333 2 года назад +101

    Something that helped me was to look for attacking moves as a way to interrupt the opponent if you need to escape danger or develop a stuck piece. If I can safely threaten one of my opponent's pieces, many times he needs to defend it or move it, which can buy me an extra turn, and with the board a little bit different on my next turn it can sometimes give me better move choices without the opponent having made much progress, if that makes sense.

    • @saudade7842
      @saudade7842 Год назад +5

      Yeah, that's really good at buying time. One example for me would be when one of my opponents had me in a but of a tight spot, but his queen was out, and while I could not take it at the time, I could harass it, so I did, and I shut down his attack for a while while I kept moving my pieces further into his territory, putting him on the defensive. That was a really satisfying win and I learned a lot from that game

  • @mbc-xe8rb
    @mbc-xe8rb 10 месяцев назад +2

    I have watched and re-watched this several times. . What a great and helpful overview for those of us who are still learning! THANK YOU!

  • @Hippie_steve
    @Hippie_steve Год назад +7

    Was doing pretty rough at first but after coming and watching these principles I’ve been able to get 2 checkmates! Great video!

  • @dipoa2
    @dipoa2 2 года назад +347

    This is a great video. Loved how you sped through the principles whilst still making the points. You're a good teacher. Keep it up!

    • @billyndolo4348
      @billyndolo4348 Год назад +1

      He is.

    • @murderah17
      @murderah17 Год назад

      Let's play a game Dipo. I will win many times against you, trust me.

    • @y0h0p38
      @y0h0p38 Год назад

      ​@@murderah17 Insecure?

  • @paulbali9998
    @paulbali9998 2 года назад +147

    wow, that was super useful. even the ones i knew implicitly - it's good to have them confirmed explicit. will enjoy applying the new ones!

    • @ChessVibesOfficial
      @ChessVibesOfficial  2 года назад +6

      Glad it was helpful!

    • @itismethatguy
      @itismethatguy 2 года назад +1

      Yeah earlier i exchanged bishop for a knight sometimes didnt know that bishop was better….

  • @marianodemiguel3442
    @marianodemiguel3442 9 месяцев назад +9

    I can not thank you enough for this youtube. I was so rusty and struggling. Following your suggestions i was finally able to beat my PC normal mode! I realized I have been doing so many mistakes. I am finally organized. Very condensed information, everything is important.

  • @gregorymorris4693
    @gregorymorris4693 Год назад +1

    The most helpful, informative approach to chess I have seen on any platform, at this level. THANK YOU!!

  • @tomvonneefe4269
    @tomvonneefe4269 Год назад +99

    Wow I was skeptical about a Top 35 video but this was very amusing and helpful. I haven't even seen this guy play but I know he's good. I learned more in 20 minutes than all my games I've played. Thank you so much for the tips. They feel like secret weapons.

    • @thegenuine9173
      @thegenuine9173 Год назад

      I'm

    • @MrMrneil1
      @MrMrneil1 Год назад +1

      actually, it helped that I've been in these situations before, making it a lot easier to 'relate to'.

    • @k46_clips
      @k46_clips Год назад

      Yeah he is really good

    • @Flexy59
      @Flexy59 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@MrMrneil1 100%! for most of them i immediately remembered a recent scenario where i subconsciously understood that principle but didnt actually consider it as such at that moment, really a good video

    • @andrewhenriques6806
      @andrewhenriques6806 7 месяцев назад

      Enjoyed this Video very much,

  • @RayCincy
    @RayCincy 2 года назад +14

    another aspect of rule 27 i just realized about knights being great blockaders of pawns is that if they do jump forward on the rank behind the pawn it also protects the square the pawn might push to! :)

  • @ElliotCookeAzkue
    @ElliotCookeAzkue Год назад +1

    Amazing! Thanks a lot! Great to see genuine people wanting to help others!

  • @Rammbock
    @Rammbock Год назад +44

    Thanks. I have actually intuitively adopted all the principles over time. Principle 21 is the one I'm struggling with, as is EVERY beginner: "attack". This is what makes you an intermediate player: being able to plan an attack, i.e. predict more than 2-3 moves.

  • @tonysu8860
    @tonysu8860 2 года назад +13

    A nice collection of "Vital Chess Principles."
    Yet, if there are many out there that prefer memorizing fewer Principles,
    A number of the listed can be summarized and taught as
    1. Identifying or striving for dominance of a network of squares (White vs Black). Dominance means having the "Good Piece" that can take advantage of that network of squares vs your Opponent having the inferior piece, suffering from lack of Dominance (And hopefully you'll never be in that inferior position yourself).
    2. Similar to the first rule, Identifying or striving for dominance of individual critical squares. This is usually a bit more difficult than the first rule because this requires understanding of various pawn structures and being able to recognize why certain squares are more valuable than others. A short list of possible reasons are... Unassailable because the opposing pawn structure has weaknesses. A piece on a particular square can have "blocking qualities" like plugging an open file so your opponent can't use it. A critical square for a particular piece for a particular combination pattern. A particular square that can enable transit to another critical square or multiple possible squares.
    3. Mobility can be a crucial winning (or losing) characteristic. The only reason why for instance a Queen is worth more than any other piece is because she can move to so many squares on an open board... Otherwise, she is like any other piece on the board, a piece of wood (or plastic). Therefor, for each and every of your pieces, strive to enhance the absolute number of possible squares it can move to, but balance that thought with the first and second rules because the quality of squares also makes a difference. So, what leads to an advantage in Mobility? Stuff like dominating the center, control of more space, control of open lines like files and diagonals. And, this can become complex as advanced technique can require certain piece and pawn strategies or even sacrifices that lead to necessary mobility that was originally denied.
    4. The inverse of the above 3rd principle is also extremely important, and numerous successful strategies can be built on simply restricting the scope of your opponent's pieces and denying them access to a network of files and critical squares.
    The above few principles encapsulate the underlying principles of Chess, but may suffer compared to this author's 35 Vital Principles by being less specific with concrete examples.
    The idea of these are that hopefully the Student learns how to think of chess strategically with all pieces working in coordination rather than as individual, disconnected moves.

  • @olivernordin
    @olivernordin 2 года назад +79

    Great video. I had missed some of these basics

    • @e.m.9590
      @e.m.9590 Год назад +1

      1m subs and three likes?! XD

  • @howardhill3395
    @howardhill3395 2 месяца назад

    Love how you explain, demonstrating basic principles visually & with reasons. Thank you.

  • @1CoolHandNuke
    @1CoolHandNuke Год назад +1

    Great video. Thanks for clear, quick explanations and no BS.

  • @sunrevolver
    @sunrevolver 2 года назад +665

    When I play a cutie, I develop feelings instead of pieces

    • @fyezahmed1947
      @fyezahmed1947 2 года назад +9

      😂

    • @locutusdborg126
      @locutusdborg126 2 года назад +17

      Since most players are male I assume you are gay, not that there's anything wrong with that.

    • @sunrevolver
      @sunrevolver 2 года назад +15

      @@locutusdborg126 maybe or may not be.. didn't know a male can be a cutie as well

    • @sunrevolver
      @sunrevolver 2 года назад +1

      @@ddist0rtt dat... is illegal...

    • @ralphzoontjens
      @ralphzoontjens 2 года назад

      As the host said: Stay sharp, play smart.

  • @toddinhali
    @toddinhali 2 года назад +7

    Fantastic instructional video! I knew nearly all of these, but never had them explicitly explained and validated. The three or four I didn't know will really help my end game.

  • @sbash3003
    @sbash3003 Год назад

    i like how you made the tutorial.
    you broke down a lot of fundamentals in a quick efficient style.
    i feel i learned a lot.
    cheers

  • @SamFickelHomeLending
    @SamFickelHomeLending Год назад +4

    When I saw 35 in less than 20 mins I didn't think you'd be very detailed, but was pleasantly surprised with your performance. Well done!

  • @nobodycouldhavethis
    @nobodycouldhavethis 3 года назад +42

    This video has helped me so much, and I've still got 5 or so more to understand and add to my game. Having said this, I want more! Give us more like this!

    • @ChessVibesOfficial
      @ChessVibesOfficial  3 года назад +9

      I've got a part 2 in the pipeline that will happen at some point soon-ish. Appreciate the feedback! Glad it's helping 👍

  • @dio8636
    @dio8636 2 года назад +5

    I've enjoyed playing chess for a while, but am only just now starting to learn some theory. This video has been the best so far! Quick, straight to the point, and many pieces of info in one place. Thanks man!

  • @johnlysic6727
    @johnlysic6727 8 месяцев назад +1

    This was very helpful - I have a feeling I will be watching this over and over again to help me better understand this wonderful game - thank you

  • @teddiegauta651
    @teddiegauta651 Год назад +2

    since watching this video. i've gotten a lot better because i can somewhat read the board better now. i appreciate this video. great work.

  • @dewar2002
    @dewar2002 2 года назад +8

    This is fantastic. So much great info packed into a relatively short video.

  • @brazenzebra
    @brazenzebra 2 года назад +34

    Fantastic video! Thanks. Can you give us some more principles, or even tricks? Some principles I've learned as a novice:
    1. Beware of focusing too much on your own attack. You may miss major threats from your opponent. Stay vigilant!
    2. Beware of intuition. It lies! You must calculate, calculate, caculate.
    3. Beware of sneaky moves from your opponent in a winning endgame. You may be suckered into a stalemate.

    • @psykonauta
      @psykonauta Год назад +2

      Bad intuition lies. Real intuition is right only 100% of the times

    • @williamschlass6371
      @williamschlass6371 Месяц назад

      @@psykonautatrue but how do you distinguish between good and bad intuition except for calculation or hindsight?

    • @yusufdemirok8108
      @yusufdemirok8108 3 дня назад

      good job keep playing

  • @mandanaa9578
    @mandanaa9578 Год назад

    Thank you for the very well made and informative video. I like that you just go to the point without any extra unnecessary talking and time wasting.
    Just subscribed.

  • @ahuman32478
    @ahuman32478 8 месяцев назад +3

    Another good principle to note is "responsibility pins". It's when an opponent's piece must stay in a certain area to prevent checkmate or an immense loss of material. The piece's responsibilities keep it confined "aka" pinned to an area. For example, if I have my rooks lined up, getting ready to back rank mate my opponent's king, my opponent's rooks MUST stay on the first rank to prevent checkmate. That means I can get a piece like my bishop onto the second rank to help attack rooks and attack the king without worry about it being captured, because the instant one of the rooks goes to the second rank to capture my bishop, I can deliver back rank mate.

  • @Silverpicker
    @Silverpicker Год назад +42

    As a new chess player, I gotta say this was a fantastic primer. Very helpful. Thank you!

  • @joepiazza3756
    @joepiazza3756 2 года назад +48

    Another thing to add about blocking pawns with knights is that when you move the knight away it isn't the easiest for the pawn to immediately move up since the square it would enter if it moved up 1 space is in the Knight's vision.

    • @FantasyFantasy934
      @FantasyFantasy934 2 года назад +1

      Wouldn’t that work for a bishop, queen and rook too?

    • @FantasyFantasy934
      @FantasyFantasy934 2 года назад

      My personal preference is bishop blocking as if the opponent wants to use an adjacent pawn to attack the blockading piece, my bishop would be covering that square and attacking the pawn

  • @dwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww
    @dwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww 2 месяца назад +2

    I’ve taught myself a lot of rules playing chess & it’s great seeing most of these rules in your video. Personally, one thing I don’t abide by is developing pieces asap. I’ve learned to develop my pawns in early game to really take control of the games direction, they are integral to many of my wins. I’ve never looked at chess strategies, how I play is based solely on my own experiences, which is likely why I’m a 1500 level at my very best. However, I enjoy this aspect of chess, which is developing my own strategies, I don’t want it to turn into a game of pure memorization. So I will continue to break any rules I want 😁

  • @cryptoskywalker1714
    @cryptoskywalker1714 Месяц назад

    This was awesome, brother. Thank you. I knew almost all of these, but I still learned something. And, it’s great to have a sort of mental checklist when working through the game.

  • @mathew96385296
    @mathew96385296 2 года назад +4

    This is an incredibly well done video. Very concise and nice fast pace. Thank you for not wasting time.

  • @N2O_The1000thElement
    @N2O_The1000thElement 3 года назад +15

    I like how you used pratical positions rather than just a position that is completely winning for the side that you’re on

  • @kevinlee7083
    @kevinlee7083 7 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you this is inspiring! I want to learn how to properly play and understand chess but theres just too many strategies lol. Thank you for helping me understand at least basic concepts. As you explain each concept the game starts to take more shape and i began to see each piece differently. It makes more sense and the board no longer looks like just a bunch of squares. I can actually see the territory and its advantages.

  • @catskillyeti2405
    @catskillyeti2405 Год назад +1

    Best informational video for chest and helpful information. If you came across so far, thank you sir!

  • @MeuFilho-EL
    @MeuFilho-EL 2 года назад +4

    My undestanding of these principles are:
    Who controls the most of board has biggest chance to win (either by developing pieces or by area denial of spaces, i mean using rocks in files or half files, basically spheres of infuence). That is why the center of the board is important.
    Use 3 pieces to develop game fast, to control and influence space fast. Be fast.
    Always look for better positions, by having "high ground" opportunities to win will become visible.
    Never forget the weak link. The king is my vulnereable link, it must be protected, must be casttled, but defend it after i attack my opponents king. An attack is by itself a defense, it puts pressure on my opponents.
    What do you think?

  • @TheSpiritualCamp
    @TheSpiritualCamp 2 года назад +3

    This is one of the best, and most synthetic video I've ever seen ! Congrats !

  • @user-mo2sg8mf5k
    @user-mo2sg8mf5k 9 месяцев назад +1

    Amazing format of explaining each chess principle one by one. Would like to see more

  • @maistortrichko
    @maistortrichko 6 месяцев назад

    Thanks for your amazing content bro. Straight to the point, loud and clear! Cheers!

  • @coachwilliamsakadr.gambit5334
    @coachwilliamsakadr.gambit5334 2 года назад +4

    You're the Man Master Lopez. This is great and easy for my students to see.
    "Stay Sharp, play smart and take care."

  • @maximuscesar
    @maximuscesar 2 года назад +3

    This video is very instructive. I'm a beginner player myself and I've read various beginner books and some principles here I kinda learned by experience but never have seen them explained like this in any of the books I've read. Thank you very much.

  • @richardmcbride538
    @richardmcbride538 4 месяца назад

    Terrific effort!
    Well done.
    Graphics were quick-top notch visuals.
    Thank you

  • @ltisenotem
    @ltisenotem 2 года назад +14

    Solid advice. Only several games in, bouncing around 700-800 elo. Trying to learn openings, but this is really helpful seeing the principles of the game, thanks!!

    • @johnhinkleman9757
      @johnhinkleman9757 2 года назад

      Yeah principles are so much more important for a beginner than theoretical opening knowledge. If you just keep an eye on the board and develop to control the center, openings should be no problem for you

  • @snatchX626
    @snatchX626 2 года назад +151

    based on experience, principle 34 is really important 😏

    • @cedricmichaud552
      @cedricmichaud552 2 года назад +11

      The one where you see the greatest WGM being mated ^^

    • @ephemera...
      @ephemera... 2 года назад +1

      Agreed

    • @ephemera...
      @ephemera... 2 года назад

      @@blablabla7796 way to bring the conversation down dude.

    • @blablabla7796
      @blablabla7796 2 года назад +7

      @@ephemera... it’s a common internet name. I’m sorry if you didn’t like my meme.

    • @Mayank-mf7xr
      @Mayank-mf7xr 2 года назад

      It is a famous quote from Emanuel Lasker.

  • @enorramic2012
    @enorramic2012 Год назад

    What a great video! Thank you for sharing your knowledge. I am a beginner for about a year now. Your 35 strategies were very well explained and extremely helpful to me. I look forward to watching more of your chess videos. I have subscribed.

  • @julianmonconduit2272
    @julianmonconduit2272 5 месяцев назад

    super helpful and informative, you communicated all of this very transparently, thank you!

  • @AnovaLisaDragonfly
    @AnovaLisaDragonfly Год назад +24

    This is probably the most valuable chess video I’ve seen to help me improve my game. My 11 yo son has started to surpass my skill level, so I need to up my game, LOL. Thanks for this vid!

  • @andycopeland7051
    @andycopeland7051 2 года назад +14

    Watched your videos all night. Man you have a lot of great information that is paced well and easily digested. Please keep it up man you're doing great. Thank you

    • @k46_clips
      @k46_clips Год назад +1

      Really a great tutor

  • @richstevenson1
    @richstevenson1 11 месяцев назад

    Fantastic video! Thank you for posting this! It was well put together and easy to understand, an extremely helpful! Thank you!

  • @TheButtpod
    @TheButtpod 8 месяцев назад

    HUGELY helpful. This video is exactly what I was looking for! Actually better... I was hoping for 10 general principals. Thanks.

  • @FredPlanatia
    @FredPlanatia 2 года назад +9

    A related thought to principle 35 (know when to ignore chess principles): these principles can give contradicting advice. In a given position, you need to weigh which of the principles is more important in that situation. I guess some calculation and a lot of experience helps you to decide which principle is more important in a given situation.

  • @corradog7015
    @corradog7015 3 года назад +8

    Great video! Especially the middle game principles. Knowing some of the general ideas of what to do in the middle game greatly helps minimize the moments of confusion about what to do once all my pieces are developed and my king is castled.

    • @ChessVibesOfficial
      @ChessVibesOfficial  3 года назад +3

      Glad it was helpful! Thanks for the comment, Corrado!

    • @grantojeh1251
      @grantojeh1251 2 года назад

      The middle game can be very confusing !

  • @lacloche649
    @lacloche649 7 месяцев назад

    Crystal clear and very concise.
    Thanks a lot ?

  • @penmuni3833
    @penmuni3833 Год назад

    Thank you mate. You are brilliant at explaining things easily.

  • @nathanfisher4687
    @nathanfisher4687 Год назад +38

    Just seeing this now - sharing with everyone I know. Was a 1650 player at 15 in 1990. You nailed a lot of good ones. Two I didn’t know. I think you need a follow up video with more of these. Call them bonus rules. I have a few.
    1) generally speaking, do not exchange a ‘good bishop’ for a bad bishop
    2) create open lanes for bishops to increase their value
    3) attack supported pawns with minority attack
    4) keep tempo, or fight to get it
    5) create space, when possible
    6) support all pieces, when possible. Don’t leave hanging pieces
    7) understand tactics like forks and pins

    • @paulkanja
      @paulkanja Год назад

      so chess noob here,, is Ne4 at 12:00 bad?

    • @esquerdocorrimao4021
      @esquerdocorrimao4021 Год назад

      @@paulkanja no, its not at all

    • @paulkanja
      @paulkanja Год назад

      @@esquerdocorrimao4021 thanks :)

    • @mitch6602
      @mitch6602 Год назад

      @@paulkanja yeah it really is he was wrong after you do that he takes you bishop with his bishop after you move your queen (you cant take he will take with the knight) so after you move your queen he take your knight you are 2 pieces down and saving the rook is hard so yeah thats REALLY bad but keep trying to get better trust me its worth it

    • @spark5010
      @spark5010 Год назад +1

      @@paulkanja After Nxe4 I think White can play Bxe7 forking Queen and rook, so Ne4 is bad

  • @clashdevil2925
    @clashdevil2925 Год назад +4

    Following these principles
    Learning 3 opening for both sides
    not hanging pieces
    And practicing your tactics can alone help you get to 1600-1800

  • @mrmanseven
    @mrmanseven 3 месяца назад

    Great video. Quick and to the point. So many people talk on and on and on and on. Love this video.

  • @jahstreet1224
    @jahstreet1224 3 месяца назад

    BRAVO, BRAVO.
    Great lesson. Thank you.

  • @WARRENBUFETT
    @WARRENBUFETT 2 года назад +6

    Man. You're a great chess teacher.

  • @asswhole4195
    @asswhole4195 3 года назад +73

    Hundreds of chess principles? Well I hope you do more videos on them!

    • @ChessVibesOfficial
      @ChessVibesOfficial  3 года назад +46

      Haha yeah a lot of them are pretty obscure and don't show up a lot in games so I tried to just focus on the most common. But yeah if there's enough interest will definitely do a part 2!

    • @stevea1936
      @stevea1936 3 года назад +4

      @@ChessVibesOfficial I was just about to ask if you were going to do a second video. Would be really cool!

    • @darylallen2485
      @darylallen2485 2 года назад +2

      @@ChessVibesOfficial ::waves hand and invokes force powers:: - You WILL make a part 2 of chess principles. 🤣

    • @ephemera...
      @ephemera... 2 года назад

      @@darylallen2485 It worked! He did.

  • @pa-mo
    @pa-mo Месяц назад

    This was excellent. Lots of good info and compact for people like me that know the very very basics but are trying to learn some things to get a bit better quickly.

  • @breezybears
    @breezybears 6 месяцев назад

    Thank you so much for the quick and easy explanation !

  • @md.zabirshams6776
    @md.zabirshams6776 3 года назад +126

    Well..The best part was the "Hope Chess" Part. :D.

    • @cornelio78
      @cornelio78 2 года назад +4

      agreed 😆 that's me some years ago

    • @durgapun9475
      @durgapun9475 2 года назад

      @@cornelio78 p

    • @pixelbogpixxelbog2090
      @pixelbogpixxelbog2090 2 года назад

      I play so much hope chess... sometimes I attack enemies queen with my queen by putting my queen hanging and i hope they dont see it. It works around 66% in my elo(1000), and around 90% in bullet :)

    • @davisglanton9871
      @davisglanton9871 2 года назад

      @@pixelbogpixxelbog2090 keep doing that if you never want move up in elo lol

    • @BrisLS1
      @BrisLS1 2 года назад

      You always have some kind of hope for what you hope your opponent does. You just have to have a plan for if they don't. Not every trap is as "Hopium" as Scholar's mate. Fried Liver has won me a ton of games lately.

  • @wolfie5
    @wolfie5 2 года назад +9

    Knew most of these - but the knights in closed - bishops in open positions info was very useful thanks.

    • @far2ez539
      @far2ez539 Год назад

      Yes. I was pleased to see that tip. I recall reading it ages ago in a book by, I believe, GM Nimzowitsch, that I haven't seen many mention since.
      Another great tip he had was about doubled pawns. In particular, he noted that the true weakness of doubled pawns is the space _in front of_ the two pawns, as well as the front of the two pawns. The square in front of the two pawns is weak for two reasons: (1) a blockade on that square stops both, and (2) that square has already been inherently weakened by the adjacent pawn traveling to that file. Additionally, he noted that the forward pawn is weak for two reasons: (1) the adjacent files lack a defender for it (because it _was_ the defender of that square), and (2) it cannot be protected from behind by a rook (because the backwards pawn blocks the rook).
      Interestingly, he argued that a doubled pawn structure stops being a net weakness if you can address these two problems (defending the forward-pawn and the blockade square), and even argued that it is overall a net-benefit in that scenario (as it offers far more protection against minor pieces -- Knights especially).

  • @pianoLee-sx9dx
    @pianoLee-sx9dx 11 месяцев назад

    Love your tutorials! keep up with the good work!

  • @lyndhurstcollins9189
    @lyndhurstcollins9189 8 месяцев назад

    Excellent presentation thank you

  • @kayasper6081
    @kayasper6081 2 года назад +75

    I am a rather regular player (1600) and although most of these principles I know, it is really good to have them all mentioned together, thanks! I'll suscribe

    • @davegrenier1160
      @davegrenier1160 2 года назад +4

      Yes. I've found the best chess books to revisit are those that cover the principles. You can't go wrong by re-enforcing the basics.

    • @Benyad23q
      @Benyad23q 2 года назад

      when

    • @Blitz_tz
      @Blitz_tz 2 года назад

      aronbadu lixu

    • @hendo1877
      @hendo1877 2 года назад +4

      you’re not 1600

    • @kayasper6081
      @kayasper6081 2 года назад +1

      @@hendo1877 What makes you think that? Wanna play?

  • @Hannibalzulu77
    @Hannibalzulu77 Год назад +4

    I really appreciate this video. I am an intermediate chess player who is trying to up my skills, and finding videos with a lot of good intermediate chess philosophy is harder than I expected.
    I keep finding either really obvious basic stuff for beginners or extremely advanced tactics that still feel like they are beyond my skill level for now.
    I especially loved the rook file advice principles because I've gotten good at developing bishops and Knights, but besides castling I feel like my rooks don't get developed or used until the endgame.

  • @ivanvincent3532
    @ivanvincent3532 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you so much for this informative video! Cheers

  • @VicktoRUrosAndrijasevic
    @VicktoRUrosAndrijasevic 2 года назад +10

    Great! I wish I had this kind of info when I was starting! 🙂😉

  • @LeventK
    @LeventK 2 года назад +10

    Remember.
    The only thing in chess that doesn't have an exception is the "there will always be exceptions" rule.

  • @dannydance9910
    @dannydance9910 5 месяцев назад

    Love this man. Thanks!

  • @nobodycouldhavethis
    @nobodycouldhavethis 3 года назад +4

    Thanks for the knowledge :) great vid

  • @rajat895
    @rajat895 3 года назад +4

    Well explained! Been looking for content to improve my middle game

  • @alexandercvetkov1556
    @alexandercvetkov1556 Год назад

    Great Video... thanks man. in short all the most important principles and all of them very well explained...

  • @3Kefka6Palazzo9
    @3Kefka6Palazzo9 Год назад +2

    One move I find to work often (for reference I have played roughly 4,000 chess games, still new) I play Rapid Chess, it is possible to mess with your opponents mind by starting out with your tactics very quickly or very slowly. Either way you know what you will do but if you rush your opponent rushes yet our plans are already predetermined, then I slow down mid game and my opponent does make many hope mistakes. I can also start off slow making my opponent think I take caution and mid game go very quickly with a plan that is flexible enough to work even if something unexpected should arrive. Great video by the way.

  • @itsPenguinBoy
    @itsPenguinBoy 2 года назад +7

    Excellent! I recognised many but I never thought about pawns capturing towards the centre, counter-attacking in the centre being the best response to a flank attack, knights to block pawns, OR the one about when to trade pawns

    • @travelfreak2
      @travelfreak2 2 года назад

      Pawns capturing towards the center was the first rule I ever learnt at age 14

    • @andycopeland7051
      @andycopeland7051 2 года назад +1

      Hey did you ever break out of 800??

    • @itsPenguinBoy
      @itsPenguinBoy 2 года назад +1

      @@andycopeland7051 hell no

    • @andycopeland7051
      @andycopeland7051 2 года назад +1

      @@itsPenguinBoy I'm still struggling and floundering in that range myself after a year of trying semi-seriously. I just gotta learn more, get better. Good luck man it's worth the pursuit. Happy new year, God bless you

    • @itsPenguinBoy
      @itsPenguinBoy 2 года назад

      @@andycopeland7051 I honestly think there is a ceiling to my level of play... I love learning strategies, including very advanced ones, but during a game I don't think my spacial processing, or capacity for organised memorisation, ever allows me to follow the lines I would like to, a seemingly obvious blunder always takes me down first.
      When I have hovered at the higher end of my range, it has required constant revision of openings, strategies, positions, but I never seemed to retain it long enough to move on to newer information, and improve my playing to the level of my understanding.
      With certain things, it seems, I will always forget as quickly as I learn, and that's ok, because I enjoy the experience of playing chess and don't need to be big winner. I love teaching kids chess and see them get better than me, and have non-chess-playing-friends being already close to my level for casual games.

  • @a.i.l1074
    @a.i.l1074 2 года назад +4

    Thank you man, I get overwhelmed as a beginner sometimes but this is just a logical and fun game