seeing a few people judge this dude for playing chess and i really hate it, im no grandmaster but its okay to make mistakes its part of the learning process leave him alone 😭
imma nerd out game one, take this as whatever you need it to be. move one: white plays e3, that doesn't control the center, so you take control with e5, perfectly fine with this. Move two: white plays knight h3, which does NOTHING good for white, I would just go d5 here, to have both pawns out, and then there the possibility of taking on h3, and doubling whites pawn into the edge of the board. Knight c6 doesn't necessarily accomplish that. Another contender could have been knight f6, simply controling the e4 square. Move three: white plays e4, you develop, that's perfectly fine, I would have gone knight f6 yet again simply to pressure e4. move four: white plays... g4?? This move is terrible by martin, d6 can pressure g4 instantly. Another move could have been knight f6, again, threatening to take on e4. Queen f6 simply blocks the knight, and leads the queen to being a possible target. move five: no complaints oncesoever. move six: knight a3 is another terrible move by Martin, Knight d4 could have been crushing, as you're threatening to go Knight f3 and revoke whites castling rights. However d6 is a completely reasonable move and I can't complain too hard about it. move seven: uh, ya, Martin just hates having pieces? I guess? moves nine through thirdteen: queen f3 was possible, simply a free rook. Gotta look for those things. move fourteen: still queen f3 because it's forcing the king to move to a less safe square. Long castling is fine though I suppose. move seventeen: just hangs a pawn, but fair. moves 18 to 20: same as moves 9 to 13. move 22: king b8 is just better then f5 for somewhat clear reasons but it's not the end of the world or anything. move 23, king b8 is still better, but taking is entirely reasonable. move 25, not gonna pretend I understand the reasoning, queen d2 was just a free pawn tbh. move 29 is just mate in 3, with (Queen c2+, Kb4, Queen b2, if king a4 it's queen a3 mate, if king c4 it's knight e4 mate. move 31 is a misclick moment. move 33 is just queen takes knight, and a proceeding mate in 3. move 35 is a free knight. move 36 was uh, a move, of all time.
A common opening i play is with all nights out (the move that makes the knights closer to the center) and the dark square bishop above the night, when both e pawns are pushed. another tip of advice is that you should not bring your queen into the game so early
Don't worry about losing to Martin, we all had to start somewhere. If someone were to not respect you because you are a beginner or were a beginner at one point, that reflects very poorly on them. Though I have a couple of hints to hopefully help you play better: You generally don't want to get your queen out too early, as that greatly increases the chances of her getting trapped. She's better suited for supporting pieces from a safe spot. You also generally don't want to move your knights to H and A files, as that drastically reduces their usefulness. Don't resign so easily - everyone makes mistakes, even grandmasters. And Martin is nowhere near grandmaster level. Trade when you're winning, avoid trades when you're losing. Being up three pawns during early game is not much of a big deal, but being up three pawns during endgame is almost winning. On that note, don't be afraid to trade down when you have a massive advantage. When you're, say, a queen and a rook up, trading the rook for a dangerous knight might be worth it. If you want to move a piece to a better position, make sure it's not just going to get kicked out. Think about what you could do to your opponent, and what your opponent might try to do to you. Consider looking up some openings. Learn about pins, forks, and skewers if you haven't already. Finally, try to actively be aware of the board. Think about what pieces are on the same lines, files, and diagonals, and think about where a piece (especially knight) would have to be put to fork your pieces. After some time, you'll learn to do this effortlessly. I also want to commend your fight for the center and minor piece development, both of which are very important. Keep it up and you'll get much better ^_^
1. Don't push too many pawns in front of the king 2. Don't trade everything, look which side is happier (this rule doesn't apply with martin cuz he's kinda dumb but anyway) 3. Try to always ask: what can my opponent do after this move. If what he can do gives him advantage, find a better move 4. Don't bring the queen too early to the game. It's bad 70% of the times as it can get harassed and humilliated a lot of different ways over the board wasting moves, instead, bring minor pieces (knight and bishop) out, then castle and only when the board is developed, develop your queen. (this doesn't force the queen to stay at the starting square for like a whole 15 moves, you know when you really need your queen. That's your cue to get it out hope all this advice helps!
always pay attention to your opponents moves! see what they are trying to achieve! maybe a better position, or they are striving for an attack on the king
Never surrender under 2000 elo.
seeing a few people judge this dude for playing chess and i really hate it, im no grandmaster but its okay to make mistakes its part of the learning process leave him alone 😭
When you blundered your queen at 3:22 , you were still winning.
imma nerd out game one, take this as whatever you need it to be.
move one: white plays e3, that doesn't control the center, so you take control with e5, perfectly fine with this.
Move two: white plays knight h3, which does NOTHING good for white, I would just go d5 here, to have both pawns out, and then there the possibility of taking on h3, and doubling whites pawn into the edge of the board. Knight c6 doesn't necessarily accomplish that. Another contender could have been knight f6, simply controling the e4 square.
Move three: white plays e4, you develop, that's perfectly fine, I would have gone knight f6 yet again simply to pressure e4.
move four: white plays... g4?? This move is terrible by martin, d6 can pressure g4 instantly. Another move could have been knight f6, again, threatening to take on e4. Queen f6 simply blocks the knight, and leads the queen to being a possible target.
move five: no complaints oncesoever.
move six: knight a3 is another terrible move by Martin, Knight d4 could have been crushing, as you're threatening to go Knight f3 and revoke whites castling rights. However d6 is a completely reasonable move and I can't complain too hard about it.
move seven: uh, ya, Martin just hates having pieces? I guess?
moves nine through thirdteen: queen f3 was possible, simply a free rook. Gotta look for those things.
move fourteen: still queen f3 because it's forcing the king to move to a less safe square. Long castling is fine though I suppose.
move seventeen: just hangs a pawn, but fair.
moves 18 to 20: same as moves 9 to 13.
move 22: king b8 is just better then f5 for somewhat clear reasons but it's not the end of the world or anything.
move 23, king b8 is still better, but taking is entirely reasonable.
move 25, not gonna pretend I understand the reasoning, queen d2 was just a free pawn tbh.
move 29 is just mate in 3, with (Queen c2+, Kb4, Queen b2, if king a4 it's queen a3 mate, if king c4 it's knight e4 mate.
move 31 is a misclick moment.
move 33 is just queen takes knight, and a proceeding mate in 3.
move 35 is a free knight.
move 36 was uh, a move, of all time.
When I saw this move at 3:59 I laughed so hard
usually you should not want to put knights on the sides as they can't move there as much
A common opening i play is with all nights out (the move that makes the knights closer to the center) and the dark square bishop above the night, when both e pawns are pushed. another tip of advice is that you should not bring your queen into the game so early
I enjoyed this! Please keep up the good work. I've subbed so know I'll be keeping tabs haha!
I'm new to chess as well good to see I'm not the only one who struggled
Yk if it’s the endgame and ur opponent has like a pawn or a knight, you could trade that for a queen as long as u have like a rook or lots of pawns
1:42 that’s not a blunder the bot is just delaying forced checkmate for as long as it can
bro, you would have won all those games if you didn't resign them
martin got me with scholars mate the other day, even us noobs dont get a chance against him
thats for trying to cheer me up •ᴗ•
Bro missed mate in one 5 times
Its actually pretty good for a complete beginner. Keep it up!
3:22 Can anyone explain why did he not continue playing, why couldn’t he take with pawn
Chess can be overwhelming and scary, so resigning early is a common beginner mistake.
he was frustrated because he blundered his queen. Even though, after taking the bishop, it still would have been winning for him.
Don't worry about losing to Martin, we all had to start somewhere. If someone were to not respect you because you are a beginner or were a beginner at one point, that reflects very poorly on them. Though I have a couple of hints to hopefully help you play better:
You generally don't want to get your queen out too early, as that greatly increases the chances of her getting trapped. She's better suited for supporting pieces from a safe spot.
You also generally don't want to move your knights to H and A files, as that drastically reduces their usefulness.
Don't resign so easily - everyone makes mistakes, even grandmasters. And Martin is nowhere near grandmaster level.
Trade when you're winning, avoid trades when you're losing. Being up three pawns during early game is not much of a big deal, but being up three pawns during endgame is almost winning.
On that note, don't be afraid to trade down when you have a massive advantage. When you're, say, a queen and a rook up, trading the rook for a dangerous knight might be worth it.
If you want to move a piece to a better position, make sure it's not just going to get kicked out.
Think about what you could do to your opponent, and what your opponent might try to do to you.
Consider looking up some openings.
Learn about pins, forks, and skewers if you haven't already.
Finally, try to actively be aware of the board. Think about what pieces are on the same lines, files, and diagonals, and think about where a piece (especially knight) would have to be put to fork your pieces. After some time, you'll learn to do this effortlessly.
I also want to commend your fight for the center and minor piece development, both of which are very important. Keep it up and you'll get much better ^_^
1. Don't push too many pawns in front of the king
2. Don't trade everything, look which side is happier (this rule doesn't apply with martin cuz he's kinda dumb but anyway)
3. Try to always ask: what can my opponent do after this move. If what he can do gives him advantage, find a better move
4. Don't bring the queen too early to the game. It's bad 70% of the times as it can get harassed and humilliated a lot of different ways over the board wasting moves, instead, bring minor pieces (knight and bishop) out, then castle and only when the board is developed, develop your queen. (this doesn't force the queen to stay at the starting square for like a whole 15 moves, you know when you really need your queen. That's your cue to get it out
hope all this advice helps!
always pay attention to your opponents moves! see what they are trying to achieve! maybe a better position, or they are striving for an attack on the king
Keep going strong
Try using the 4 knights opening
Its pretty simple and not that bad
you blundered checkmate
no way a beginner blundered checkmate
@@pd_heartHe could’ve studied theory instead, jumping into chess blind like this is just asking for shittalk.
I used to lose to martin a few months ago but at least now i have to worry about wally (its hell fighting wally)
Why did you resign the first game while you were up 14 points of material 😂
If you ever want some tips, however many i can give, id always be happy to help
Your so underrated
Remote Chess Academy is a great channel, helped me more than any other. Hosted by grandmaster Igor Smirnov, couldn't recommend any other channel more
hey! if you want someone to teach you, there’s a bunch of people on discord willing to coach.
1:33 No you can't
But i wish you could
On move 5 game 1 u had mate in 1
XD
You're not supposed to lose to Martin.
Its rlly ok if you're new to chess