Makes sense. It was very descriptive and explained the weak spots, how to avoid them, and how to use them to win. Thanks for writing this.
This is an awesome blog post!
Very detailed and well explained. This is such an important topic and you did a great job of breaking it down!
We need more such good blog posts :)
Very detailed and well explained. This is such an important topic and you did a great job of breaking it down!
We need more such good blog posts :)
@Metagross31 said in #3:
> This is an awesome blog post!
> Very detailed and well explained. This is such an important topic and you did a great job of breaking it down!
> We need more such good blog posts :)
Thanks for the kind words, appreciate it.
> This is an awesome blog post!
> Very detailed and well explained. This is such an important topic and you did a great job of breaking it down!
> We need more such good blog posts :)
Thanks for the kind words, appreciate it.
@Ira13265 said in #2:
> Makes sense. It was very descriptive and explained the weak spots, how to avoid them, and how to use them to win. Thanks for writing this.
Thanks a lot!
> Makes sense. It was very descriptive and explained the weak spots, how to avoid them, and how to use them to win. Thanks for writing this.
Thanks a lot!
Simple
"To get squares you have to give up squares." (Bobby Fischer)
That's what I call playing the chessboard, not the pieces.
There was a moment in the movie that the coach pushed all the material off the chessboard and asked " Now do you see it !" So the actor Bobby looked at the chessboard and finally saw the answer. Playing the chessboard does not need all the pieces on the board. Some times it helps visualize thing is you imagine if a piece was not there or was there instead. Then new ideas and new key squares become visible.
There was a moment in the movie that the coach pushed all the material off the chessboard and asked " Now do you see it !" So the actor Bobby looked at the chessboard and finally saw the answer. Playing the chessboard does not need all the pieces on the board. Some times it helps visualize thing is you imagine if a piece was not there or was there instead. Then new ideas and new key squares become visible.
"Everything you need to know"? Hardly...
'Weaknesses are all there on the board, ready to be discovered'