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Chess Self Improvement Guide for every level! Improvement series S-2 episode 2

ChessLichessStrategy
Improvement Series Season 2 Episode 2. Warm welcome to the readers!

a while ago and have received quite a few responses. I want to say a couple of words about that article. First of all, it is impossible to write a precise guide for each rating level, especially for a player rated below 1000. The reason is that it’s difficult to distinguish between different studying guidelines for players rated say 500 and 800, that’s why I have combined all players below 1000 into one, a single section in my new guide.

I would repeat myself, that to get the maximum results out of the chess improvement guide you need to have a pretty good idea where you stand rating-wise right now. The best way, of course, is to play a “real life” over the board tournament (or maybe a few) and obtain an official rating. If it sounds like something you don’t want to invest your time and effort in, you can try playing on one of the chess playing sites like FreeChess.org (FICS). Try to get an established rating by playing multiple games. This rating wouldn’t be exactly equivalent to ELO (it tends to be an overestimate, subtract ~200 points) but it will give you a decent idea where you at.

Table of contents-

Beginner

Below 1000

1000-1199

1200-1399

1400-1599

1600-1799

1600-1799

Note- This is lichess ratings/ elo, but also look at above levels too.As u must be knowing and already done some.

Lets Start!!

level 1- beginner

This is a category for players who are absolute beginners meaning that they never heard of chess before, or even if they did – never played it. The first thing to do is to learn the
This is a category for players who are absolute beginners meaning that they never heard of chess before, or even if they did – never played it. The first thing to do is to learn the
This is a category for players who are absolute beginners meaning that they never heard of chess before, or even if they did – never played it. The first thing to do is to learn the basic rules of the game (chess board setup, pieces moves, promotion, castle en passant, checkmate).
Then, after the rules are learnt and understood a lot of practice is needed in order to make a leap to the next level. Joining a local chess club should provide enough practice for improvement.

Level 2- Below 1000 (lichess and other chess websites)

On this level, most of the games are being won or lost due to a serious blunder or even a series of blunders. Therefore, to dominate tournaments on this level you just need to blunder less often. Here are the two suggestions that will aid you in eliminating blunders. First of all, write your moves down before you play it. Secondly, double check your move after you write it for 10 seconds or so, to make sure that it’s not a blunder and you will not lose the game immediately. A simple thing like that will help you to avoid up to 90% of blunders and will save many games. This advice is good for players of all strengths.

Level 3- 1000-1199 (For fide,lichess,,chess.com and other websites)

If you got to this point I assume you have eliminated most of the one-move-and-resign type of blunders. It is a good time to start doing elemental tactical exercises (simple one-two move checkmates, forks, discoveries, pins). If you really want to improve you need work on tactics continuously on everyday bases. Remember, it is better to spend 20 minutes a day/5 days a week on solving tactics rather than 100 minutes in a single day once a week. Think of it as a bodybuilding for your brain.
If you got to this point I assume you have eliminated most of the one-move-and-resign type of blunders. It is a good time to start doing elemental tactical exercises (simple one-two move checkmates, forks, discoveries, pins). If you really want to improve you need work on tactics continuously on an everyday basis. Remember, it is better to spend 20 minutes a day/5 day a week on solving tactics rather than 100 minutes in a single day once a week. Think of it as a bodybuilding for your brain.
If you got to this point I assume you have eliminated most of the one-move-and-resign type of blunders. It is a good time to start doing elemental tactical exercises (simple one-two move checkmates, forks, discoveries, pins). If you really want to improve you need work on tactics continuously on an everyday basis. Remember, it is better to spend 20 minutes a day/5 day a week on solving tactics rather than 100 minutes in a single day once a week. Think of it as a bodybuilding for your brain.
If you got to this point I assume you have eliminated most of the one-move-and-resign type of blunders. It is a good time to start doing elemental tactical exercises (simple one-two move checkmates, forks, discoveries, pins). If you really want to improve you need work on tactics continuously on an everyday basis. Remember, it is better to spend 20 minutes a day/5 day a week on solving tactics rather than 100 minutes in a single day once a week. Think of it as a bodybuilding for your brain.
You can actually find multiple tactics problems on this website which are getting updated on everyday bases. You can start up by solving them daily. Regularity is the key!
Simple checkmates are also recommended for studying (Queen +King vs. King, Rook + King vs. King, 2 Rooks vs. King)

Level 4- 1200-1399 (for lichess and fide)

Study some openings, but don’t dedicate too much time to it. As I have wrote previously 20% is an optimal amount of the total study time that should be spend on the initial phase of the game at this point. You don’t need to memorize any lines, you just need a basic idea of what’s going on and where to develop the pieces (ex. Sicilian Dragon: white plays for either break in the center or king’s side pawn attack, Black is active on the queen side). Keep working on tactics, it can be either a book with hundreds of problems or a program like CT-ART. I recommend reading
Study some openings, but don’t dedicate too much time to it. As I have wrote previously 20% is an optimal amount of the total study time that should be spend on the initial phase of the game at this point. You don’t need to memorize any lines, you just need a basic idea of what’s going on and where to develop the pieces (ex. Sicilian Dragon: white plays for either break in the center or king’s side pawn attack, Black is active on the queen side). Keep working on tactics, it can be either a book with hundreds of problems or a program like CT-ART. I recommend reading
Study some openings, but don’t dedicate too much time to it. As I have wrote previously 20% is an optimal amount of the total study time that should be spend on the initial phase of the game at this point. You don’t need to memorize any lines, you just need a basic idea of what’s going on and where to develop the pieces (ex. Sicilian Dragon: white plays for either break in the center or king’s side pawn attack, Black is active on the queenside). Keep working on tactics, it can be either a book with hundreds of problems or a program like CT-ART.

Level 5- 1400-1599

You already have some basic idea of the openings you playing and you’re hopefully an okay tactician (you should continuously practice on this one picking up more complex problems) and you familiar with elemental endgame mates and promotion pattern but you’re still lacking an endgame technique to convert that extra pawn into a full point win. It is important to be able to win basic endgame positions such as King + Pawn vs. King, King + 2 Pawns vs. King +Pawn and similar. Rook endgames are also very important since they arise often. Therefore, it is a must to have at least some basic understanding of this type of endgames (Rook + Pawn vs. Rook)

Level 6- 1800-1999 (fide)

Congratulations, you’re a about to become an expert or a candidate master which is a pretty good achievement since a 2000 rated player is stronger than about 90% of all rated chess players on our planet. It means that if you pick 10 random, officially rated chess players you’re likely to beat 9 of them.
In order to make further progress you need to systemize all the chess knowledge you have and work on your personal weaknesses. The first thing you need to do is to systemize your opening preparation. The best thing to do is to have all the lines you play stored on a computer and add new ones when they appear in practical play. You can also add annotations to the lines to clarify which moves are the best and why. Ideally you should have 2-3 lines as white/black that you know well.
It is very important to analyze your own games in order to make further progress. When analyzing games you should find and record mistakes for both sides, not just your own and provide a better line instead of the one played in a game. In order to analyze the game precisely you need to repeatedly evaluate chess positions which arise on the board. You need to take into account factors such as king’s safety, material on the board, pieces activity, and pawn structure. When analyzing your own games look for patterns of mistakes that take place. You need to find at what type of positions you play better or worse and work on your weaknesses. For instance, if you know that in queen endgames you lose about 60% of games it is a good pointer to work on that type of endgames. You should do the same kind of statistics with your openings and middle games.

Being a serious chess player requires taking every opportunity you have before, after and during the game. Nutrition, time-management and are important aspect of the game and not to be underestimated.
I’m looking forward to hearing about your progress


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Bye everyone!!