35 Vital Chess Principles | Opening, Middlegame, and Endgame Principles – Chess Strategy and Ideas
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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.
Great video. I always trade my bishops for their knights because i get screwed by knight forks in the end game otherwise haha
cool video 🙂
17:05 how is that Checkmate, can't the pawn take the knight?
Great video!
very good video 😍
I got Chess Principal #6
I had success by playing safe and careful and watching for my opponent to make a mistake.
Podstawy, ale wciąż dobre dla tych, którzy uczą się podstaw…
Thanks for the video
Great vid. But you said rook is 6 points. That doesn’t sound correct. Isn’t it 5 points which also explains the bad trade bishop+knight (3+3) for a rook (5) = 6 for 5
Thank you for your hard work. That list is awesome.
gr8 vid
Thanks buddy, appreciate it
I don't know a lot about chess and never play chess, but loved this video!
Respect 🥂
I need a lot of work to do 😪
Thanks!
Thank you very much publisher.
Thank you. 5 years, I still suck, but I can beat everyone I know. There are several points that I know will help me improve more. The double pawns on the 7th, I never learned that. Although there are a handful I could probably tell you or were left out rather. All in all, a treasure of knowledge. Thank you!!
Thank you, that’s very generous of you
Absolute gold!
What about opening the centre pawn in front of the castled king? Doesn't this safeguard against a checkmate from a rogue rook which traps the king behind three pawns? Otherwise all great standard tips…
Hope chess one really speaks to me, as a child I played little chess with older guys who were much better than me so I got myself into playing hope chess cause I never thought I could win without it and later when playing with other noobs since they made tons of mistakes, the hope chess just stuck
Amazing tutorial, very instructive for beginners. Thanks for the smooth editing.
Thanks a lot bro.
Thanks.
Thanks for the video and the spreadsheet with the great tips!
Not me doing/trying the scholars check nearly everygame thinking I'm just playing standard/normal 🥲
That was excellent. Thanks!
How is 17:05 a mate? The pawn could take the knight.
tip 30 and 31 are the same tip.
I'm not good enough to know if these are the top 35 principles, but I love how you always say "generally speaking" before most of your comments to keep the know-it-alls at bay.
Great advice! Thanks.
Principle no 1 let the magnus play in yer place.
A couple more (obvious) principles:
36. Look before you leap. Scan the board for threatened pawns or pieces before making a move. I've gotten zapped by my opponent's bishop attacking from across the board.
37. Know your enemy. Clever checkmates & gambits like the Scholar's Mate work against low-level opponents but may backfire against an experienced foe.
Me playing chess: "If I have no idea what my plan is, neither will my opponent"
Belle end
Your giving problems on every different position its ridiculous
I'm confused..this is basically chess from a master
I wonder if one day, we can derive these principles from optimized ML models.
16:45 do not play hope chess
There is an exception when u r already losing by so much of material like me😛😜
this is so cool im sorry im late but i need this for a class chess tournament thank you for sharing this
Good tempo man. You don't mumble on at all.
Hey, which bishop should I value more? Dark square or light square?
Wait. Principle 31 you say don't trade pieces, tade pawns. Then you say the opposite. What's right?
17:30 i guess im the best chess player in school cz I definitely go against the principle lol
This video can be made much better. Firstly, there are no such thing as 35 principles, there are only few basic principles and many advanced ones, however beginners should learn only basic first then progress when they've shown enough confidence through games. Also principles should be defined first in the video so that it gains purpose in the video, because chess is such a complex game, humans can only maximize their chance of winning by playing around what are known as principles. Many more strategy games use principles, because following only a few certain rules is more humanly easier than calculating all variables of the game which only computers can do. however, knowing only principles but not knowing how to apply them is a useless waste of time, It should be noted that watching this video that simply knowing principles does not make you an any better player unless you apply it in real games. Also there are many habits of beginners such as using gambits without knowing why it works, some gambits break principles but they mostly depend on the enemy messing up, so it should be noted that breaking other principles can be counted as an advanced principle, because in the end what only matters is advantage. Lastly, it should be mentioned that hard work/ commitment is important in learning principles, some people's minds learn faster because they apply what they learn without question, but it will be different from everyone and only hard work will really separate good from fair players.
hey cool video but your intro is way too loud
3:51: d4 here is a free pawn tho
principle 36. Always use a butt engine against strong opponents.
Thanks Coach I have learned a lot!