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How To Learn Chess As An Adult (or, how I went from 300 to 1500 ELO in 9 months) — Alex Crompton

  • Article
  • Nov 5, 2021
  • #Chess
Alex Crompton
@raccrompton
(Author)
www.alexcrompton.com
Read on www.alexcrompton.com
1 Recommender
1 Mention
Especially at lower levels, chess is a game of short term patterns, not long term strategy. Sure, you can make a plan. But, mostly, it won't matter. It turns out trying to win a che... Show More

Especially at lower levels, chess is a game of short term patterns, not long term strategy. Sure, you can make a plan. But, mostly, it won't matter. It turns out trying to win a chess game on strategy alone is like trying to win a boxing match without throwing punches.

Why? Because your chess games are almost always decided by patterns called 'tactics' - a short sequence of moves that turns your roughly equal game into a completely unequal game. If you've played chess, you'll know the feeling: you’ve blundered a tactic every time your opponents took your Queen for free. Tactics and blunders are two sides of the same coin: blunders are move that create tactical opportunities.

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Marcelo P. Lima @MarceloPLima · May 4, 2023
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Yes, "Use Spaced Repetition. For any given test, you should repeat the same test with more and more space in between tests. This dramatically reduces study time. Gwern has the best write up on Active Recall and Spaced Repetition here."
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