You need to be patient. It sounds like you are doing good things.
You didn't mention thoroughly going over your losses as one of the things you routinely do.
Have you read any of the fine books recommended in your last thread?
You need to be patient. It sounds like you are doing good things.
You didn't mention thoroughly going over your losses as one of the things you routinely do.
Have you read any of the fine books recommended in your last thread?
Look at this position. I would guess this has come up before.
You need to be patient. It sounds like you are doing good things.
You didn't mention thoroughly going over your losses as one of the things you routinely do.
Have you read any of the fine books recommended in your last thread?
I read the bobby fischer, after that haven't started a new one. I sometimes go over my losses if I feel a certain position or blunder caused the defeat. Maybe I need to look a new way to analyze the losses since many times its hard to graps or get new insights about the losses and it seems more of a memorization, altough I propably make consistent mistakes.
Look at this position. I would guess this has come up before.
About aforementioned position. I did not see the threat to my knight (trapping). Most likely I did not see it was trapped and thought g4 was a random pawn move. I try to develop so my pieces are defended, but many times I just do the same things without further thought, which can lead to loosing pieces.
As in this example, but I have noticed they do lack coordination. I tried kings indian defence, and london system openings and I am currently studying them, but I have noticed my knowledge is lacking so I just playing "reactive" and trying not to blunder and controlling the center seems to be working much better.
I'll try to look over my losses further to avoid making same mistakes over again. I haven't played puzzle rush timed, I'll add that to my repertoire.
Thanks for the great tips! I'm certain I'll improve after fixing critical mistakes and just consistently practicing.
My current routine for daily chess is 15-20 minutes of puzzles, followed by a 10 minute rapid game and after that 10-15minutes of opening study or youtube videos by chessbrah "building chess habits". I do as many rounds as my brain can handle or have time. I feel like opening study is the hardest part I don't have the right tools to explore what would be correct.
I have stalled for a month and been on 400 elo for a while and can't seem to improve bear in mind I started to play chess 6 weeks ago.
Is there something I am doing wrong routine wise or could something be done better?
I see a big issue,you study too much openings,max 5 mins of openings. Also analyse your games always
Pick a few openings, but don't study them too hard. Unless you or your opponent plays an outright bad opening, it probably won't have any bearing on how the game goes.
It's a weird discrepancy that you are 1300+ in puzzles, but in an actual game you make absolutely beginner level blunders. In the game quoted above, it would be very hard to explain throwing away the knight on move 10 or allowing mate-in 1. And the list goes on.
Advice: pay more attention when you play the game, don't play on autopilot, don't make random moves. Use your time and think.
It's a weird discrepancy that you are 1300+ in puzzles, but in an actual game you make absolutely beginner level blunders. In the game quoted above, it would be very hard to explain throwing away the knight on move 10 or allowing mate-in 1. And the list goes on.
Advice: pay more attention when you play the game, don't play on autopilot, don't make random moves. Use your time and think.
Yeah I'll try to do it, I think its much more easier to spot puzzles since you are looking for a solution.
Improving Your Chess - Resources for Beginners and Beyond...
https://www.chess.com/blog/RussBell/improving-your-chess-resources-for-beginners-and-beyond
My current routine for daily chess is 15-20 minutes of puzzles, followed by a 10 minute rapid game and after that 10-15minutes of opening study or youtube videos by chessbrah "building chess habits". I do as many rounds as my brain can handle or have time. I feel like opening study is the hardest part I don't have the right tools to explore what would be correct.
I have stalled for a month and been on 400 elo for a while and can't seem to improve bear in mind I started to play chess 6 weeks ago.
Is there something I am doing wrong routine wise or could something be done better?