New player

New player

Only Chess

Cookies help us deliver our Services. By using our Services or clicking I agree, you agree to our use of cookies. Learn More.

D

Joined
21 Apr 06
Moves
1
21 Apr 06

Hello I have recently taken an interest in chess, however I am a complete newbie and I would like any help at all to become a moderate player, any advice or tip or help would be greatly appreciated ! Thank you !

R

Edmonton, Alberta

Joined
25 Nov 04
Moves
2101
21 Apr 06

Originally posted by Demoz
Hello I have recently taken an interest in chess, however I am a complete newbie and I would like any help at all to become a moderate player, any advice or tip or help would be greatly appreciated ! Thank you !
Hi

http://www.redhotpawn.com/board/showthread.php?threadid=39309&page=2

Half way down, page 2 follow that advice.

Keep in mind, chess is a drug. Sometimes it's a curse.

D

Joined
21 Apr 06
Moves
1
21 Apr 06

Thanks for the help RahimK, but aside from advice is there any "moves" or strategies that I should learn?

R

Edmonton, Alberta

Joined
25 Nov 04
Moves
2101
21 Apr 06
2 edits

Originally posted by Demoz
Thanks for the help RahimK, but aside from advice is there any "moves" or strategies that I should learn?
Ya, it's all on that page. I listed which websites people should read, resources to use etc... That will get you on your way to 1400 at least.

I used these when I first started out. Other then that, pick up a chess book and start reading.

b

Joined
21 Sep 05
Moves
3051
21 Apr 06

Speaking of books: two excellent chess books for beginners are:
"Invitation to Chess" by Irving Chernev, and
"Play Winning Chess" by Seirawan.
Another good one (very thorough) is:
"Complete Idiot's Guide to Chess" by Patrick Wolff.
Good luck!

MS

Under Cover

Joined
25 Feb 04
Moves
28912
21 Apr 06

Originally posted by basso
Speaking of books: two excellent chess books for beginners are:
"Invitation to Chess" by Irving Chernev, and
"Play Winning Chess" by Seirawan.
Another good one (very thorough) is:
"Complete Idiot's Guide to Chess" by Patrick Wolff.
Good luck!
Other good beginner's books are:
Chess for Dummies and The Simon and Schuster Pocket Book of Chess

R

Edmonton, Alberta

Joined
25 Nov 04
Moves
2101
21 Apr 06

All 6 or 7 of Yasser Seirwans Winning chess series.

D

Joined
21 Apr 06
Moves
1
21 Apr 06

Hmm those are all great tips guys, but I'm not sure if im gonna buy a book for chess, I might, but do you guys have anything to teach me thats important in chess?

MS

Under Cover

Joined
25 Feb 04
Moves
28912
21 Apr 06

OK, if you want cheap (read free) then go to chesskids.com and go through all the lessons there. They are targeted for children, but appropriate for anyone new to the game. The bottom line here is that you will have to do the work yourself. You aren't going to learn anything meaningful if you don't put a little effort into it.

Plop!

/dev/null

Joined
05 Feb 06
Moves
33088
21 Apr 06

Originally posted by Demoz
Hmm those are all great tips guys, but I'm not sure if im gonna buy a book for chess, I might, but do you guys have anything to teach me thats important in chess?
one important thing.

Check every move you make at least three times before you really make it. Just to make sure it is not a blunder.

i

Joined
30 Oct 04
Moves
7813
21 Apr 06

Originally posted by Demoz
Hello I have recently taken an interest in chess, however I am a complete newbie and I would like any help at all to become a moderate player, any advice or tip or help would be greatly appreciated ! Thank you !
Try with learning the basics: first be absolutely sure you know all the rules (not that en passant, stalemate, etc. occur that often but it is always nice to know). Learn the elementary mates: Q+K vs. K, R+K vs. K, B+B+K vs. K, K+R+R vs. K. Later you may pick up B+N+K vs K (that really is not that elementary). Look through as many games of the old masters as possible: while they lack the more subtle positional outmaneuvering of the contemporary grandmasters, they are a good start because they are full of tactical combinations and the motivations behind the moves are easier to understand. Play a lot of games. Always ask yourself before making a move: is there a threat to my position? what do I achieve with this move?
Review your games: try to see where you have played a bad move, and why the move is bad. Tactics is essential it may save you when nothing else can...Try improving that. I might recommend solving problems like mate in 2, mate in 3, etc for that purpose. It will also improve your skill at recognizing unlikely mates.
Ask others to analyze your games. Match it with your own analysis.
Best regards,
Peter

e8

Joined
05 Feb 06
Moves
5295
21 Apr 06

Originally posted by Demoz
Hmm those are all great tips guys, but I'm not sure if im gonna buy a book for chess, I might, but do you guys have anything to teach me thats important in chess?
Keep playing, but don't get bogged down with too many games at once.

R

Edmonton, Alberta

Joined
25 Nov 04
Moves
2101
21 Apr 06

Originally posted by Demoz
Hmm those are all great tips guys, but I'm not sure if im gonna buy a book for chess, I might, but do you guys have anything to teach me thats important in chess?
Tactics.

D

Joined
21 Apr 06
Moves
1
22 Apr 06

I apologize if I had sounded like I was requesting too much without doing much work with myself, but I am completely new to chess except for how the pieces move and I just don't know where to start.

MS

Under Cover

Joined
25 Feb 04
Moves
28912
22 Apr 06

Originally posted by Demoz
I apologize if I had sounded like I was requesting too much without doing much work with myself, but I am completely new to chess except for how the pieces move and I just don't know where to start.
You are here, start by playing a game.