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.

%1$ Comments672

    Fantastic video. Thank you for sharing. It has been very helpful to me.

    My general rule is to lose my queen by move 5 and King by move 10 ๐Ÿ˜‚

    I felt personally attacked when u used my exact opening moves and called it 'hope chess'. Explains why I'm at 200rank tho๐Ÿ˜…

    11:02
    This is just straight up wrong.
    The rook can stop both of 2 pawns on 6th rank if the rook is already on 6th rank too.

    Damn …… damn damn! This is good. Thank you so much for sharing your incredible knowledge. It definitely helps. I can't believe I played all these years without having most of these basic notions.

    What am I missing? At 17min 5sec "making the better move, the smothered mate," why doesn't the kings pawn just take the knight?

    Iโ€™ve recently got into chess itโ€™s a competitive game

    This was the most helpful video Iโ€™ve watched thus far as a beginner. Thank you!!!

    really great video…. like perfect content that's like taking years of knowledge and put it in simple term, thx for all the work behind it

    Principle #34 at the end wasnโ€™t a check mate

    Principal 30 if you're up on points trade pieces not pawns.
    Principal 31 if you're losing trade pawns don't trade pieces.

    For the smothered checkmate, you look for the better move because that's exactly why someone would sacrifice a rook.

    I'm a beginner/ intermediate amateur chess player… QUESTION!! Why can't the pawn move to D6 on Tip #34 to steal the Knight to prevent the check-mate?

    I know about all these rules but still stuck at 1800 on lichess :/

    Awesome video. I used to play all the time in college and was pretty good, but never looked into the deeper strategies of the game. This makes me want to get back into it.

    Why does this guy look like YandereDev to me sometimes

    โ€œBoth players have opposite coloured bishopsโ€
    Me trying to imagine only one player having opposite coloured bishop

    I've heard that it's usually best not to trade Queens though when you are winning. That seems to mainly benefit the losing player.

    lmbo @don't move the queen too early. He'd hate to see me play. I'd have my queen on the other side of the field before turn 14 sometimes. I often use the queen as a bluff/sacrifice(against the other queen of course) or to continuously throw my opponent off.

    Just last 3 or so rules were something new for an amateur. Give us rules to assess complicated situations in the mittelspiel or make fast decisions in the blitz of the endspiel when you have no time to calculate for 10 moves ahead.(like you did with 2 pawns on line 6). I am craving to win money in the park from pensioners.

    34 really great principles…and then 1 last one, "doesn't matter, use them all, use none, you'll still get your ass handed to you by a chess master"

    This is probably the most valuable chess video Iโ€™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!

    Great update. I will take these great tips and my loses will look far more intelligent.

    Damn, man. I have literally played the hope chess with the same moves.

    Wow. You just clarified a whole pile of stuff for me. Thanks.

    Don't anger the robot chess God, he may mess up your hand…..to soon?

    I think this has to be the most helpful chess video I have ever come across. Thanks a ton!

    Wait, I don't know these openings. How am I still alive?!

    5:00 I agree, that in that instance, yes, trading the bishop for the knight is not a good move, but I have a different reason as to why it's a bad move.

    Bishop moves twice. Knight moves once.

    Ya basically skipped a turn, and that's why I think, in that instance, it's not worth trading a Bishop for a knight.

    These are good for fast chess since sometimes you do have time to find the best move

    i swear after watching this i started to think a bit more before i moved and it made a world of diff

    Hope chess is what I've been playing this whole time?

    rule 35, know when to ignore rules 1-34 ๐Ÿ˜‚

    Also don't care about the point system. A piece that has less 'points', but is in a great position is worth more than a high value piece in an aweful position. Even the queen can be used as sacrifice as long as you know it enables you to gain a lot from it.

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