Chess Help

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Dec 17, 2004
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#1
anyone know of a good site that has legit chess strategy pointers?

i mainly want to learn how to better utilize my pawns.

or if anyone here wants to type up a discourse that'd be cool too.

if you know of a book that you HIGHLY vouch for i guess ill drop the dough for it, but only if its the absolute shit
 
Dec 17, 2004
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#3
GOOGLE ftw

also you could go to your local library and if they don't have what you're looking for they can order it for you

gee man thanks. well ive heard of google before and tried that already, but couldnt really find exactly what i was looking for

and i was asking if anyone knew of a particular book that i should look for so that i dont have 20 books that all seem the same to try to choose from

thank you so much for all of that though. very helpful
 

NAMO

Sicc OG
Apr 11, 2009
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#5
do you play timed chess or not timed?

anyway, play defensive till you get bettter

you need to think many many steps ahead
 
Nov 10, 2006
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#8
i mainly want to learn how to better utilize my pawns.

or if anyone here wants to type up a discourse that'd be cool too.
It seems that 9 out of 10 chess players I have played over the years do not know about the En-Passant rule.




The Pawn can capture an opponent's pawn 'in passing' or 'en-passant' (since the French expression is commonly used here).
For the en-passant rule to apply, the following two conditions have to be met:
The previous opponent's move had to be made with a pawn that advanced 2 squares from its starting square
The pawn making an en-passant move could have captured an opponent's pawn if it had only advanced just 1 square instead of 2.
In the diagram on the left, en-passant move applies after White pawn moves from a2 to a4. The Black pawn captures the White Pawn on the a3 square.
 
Nov 2, 2002
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#9
It seems that 9 out of 10 chess players I have played over the years do not know about the En-Passant rule.




The Pawn can capture an opponent's pawn 'in passing' or 'en-passant' (since the French expression is commonly used here).
For the en-passant rule to apply, the following two conditions have to be met:
The previous opponent's move had to be made with a pawn that advanced 2 squares from its starting square
The pawn making an en-passant move could have captured an opponent's pawn if it had only advanced just 1 square instead of 2.
In the diagram on the left, en-passant move applies after White pawn moves from a2 to a4. The Black pawn captures the White Pawn on the a3 square.
oh shit. The computer did this to me on my chess program, and i was like "WTF???" i thought the game had a glitch or something.
 
Apr 21, 2006
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#10
It seems that 9 out of 10 chess players I have played over the years do not know about the En-Passant rule.




The Pawn can capture an opponent's pawn 'in passing' or 'en-passant' (since the French expression is commonly used here).
For the en-passant rule to apply, the following two conditions have to be met:
The previous opponent's move had to be made with a pawn that advanced 2 squares from its starting square
The pawn making an en-passant move could have captured an opponent's pawn if it had only advanced just 1 square instead of 2.
In the diagram on the left, en-passant move applies after White pawn moves from a2 to a4. The Black pawn captures the White Pawn on the a3 square.
Did that shit last night. I still got beat. For some reason though... i like playin when im drunk.