![]() A GrandMaster knows what questions to ask himself when presented with a position. Hi everyone, so I've seen lots of videos,movies, software, and Chess courses and have noticed they all say the same thing. It seems that Chess can be explored through many different ways, I just wonder which one has the best results. Makes sense, I really wish someone would just make a book that gives some sort of lesson plan or study guide. Slightly off-topic, but useful information IMO. ![]() A club-level player might blunder often (every 5 moves), but I've heard that a GM usually only makes 1-2 questionable moves per long/standard chess game. They know when to break general principles.Ĥ. They also evaluate the position accurately and always try to improve the position of their pieces.ģ. That's how they know what the correct plan should be in a wide range of positions. They have experience from previous games they played before or from studying other high-level games. For them, material is just one aspect of the position.Ģ. They can find deep, hidden tactics, play positional sacrifices, or sacrifice a pawn temporarily.
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