Clear and easy to follow, WITH EXAMPLES – the top 25 chess ENDGAME principles that EVERY chess player needs to know.
My courses: โ โ
๐ Fundamental Chess Openings (FCO)
๐ Winning Chess Endings โ
๐ 1001 Deadly Checkmates
๐ 1001 Brilliant Ways to Checkmate
Timestamps:
0:00 – Intro
0:29 – #1 – Watch out for stalemate
0:50 – #2 – Activate your king
1:07 – #3 – Centralize your king
1:25 – #4 – Passed pawns should be pushed
1:52 – #5 – Try to create passed pawns
2:11 – #6 – Passed pawns should be supported by your pieces
2:50 – #7 – King and Queen checkmate idea
3:11 – #8 – King and Rook checkmate idea
3:33 – #9 – Two Bishops checkmate idea
3:57 – #10 – Knight and Bishop checkmate idea
4:54 – #11 – Two Knights checkmate idea
5:17 – #12 – Flank pawns are hard to stop (especially for Knights)
5:45 – #13 – 2 Connected pawns on 6th rank beat a rook
6:19 – #14 – Further advanced pawns are more valuable
7:11 – #15 – Opposition is important in King and Pawn endings
8:12 – #16 – Rooks go behind passed pawns
8:43 – #17 – Connected passed pawns are best, then protected, then flank
9:16 – #18 – Opposite colored bishop endings are drawish
10:07 – #19 – Bishops better than knights with pawns on both sides of board
10:26 – #20 – In Queen endings, watch out for perpetual check
11:07 – #21 – In Rook endings, cut off opponent’s king
11:42 – #22 – Rooks should be put far away from other pieces
12:30 – #23 – Wrong bishop and flank pawn is a draw
13:40 – #24 – Zugzwang!
14:48 – #25 – Knights can’t lose a tempo
VIDEOS MENTIONED:
๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น
King and Queen Checkmate:
King and Rook Checkmate:
2 Bishops Checkmate:
Knight and Bishop Checkmate:
Opposition:
๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น๐น
About this video:
These chess endgame principles cover things like Opposition, Zugzwang, Losing Tempo and much more. Additionally, you will learn the basic ideas of the King and Queen checkmate, the King and Rook checkmate, the 2 Bishops checkmate, the Knight and Bishop checkmate, and the 2 Knight checkmate (actually draw). Chess endgame principles are crucial to help you win the end of your chess games. These chess endings principles will take your chess strategy to the next level. These chess concepts and ideas are crucial to improve at chess. One of the best ways to improve your chess strategy, is to learn these important chess principles. These chess strategies will help your chess rating grow very rapidly. These chess principles are beneficial to beginners, intermediate chess players and advanced chess players as well. There are some beginner chess principles, some intermediate chess principles, and some advanced chess principles.
Chess.com links are affiliate links.
Great Video! I also love the way you pronounce Zugzwang ๐๐๐ itโs a German word and usually doesnโt sound like the English โwangโ
awesome
just want to add my voice to all the people saying your teaching style is so good. You have such a clear understanding of the concepts, and you don't mince words. you tell us what we need to know to get better, and you show us what we need to do. you make the concepts into something more cohesive and big-picture than just 'here's what moves you make.'
I thought โend game,โ simply means queens are off the board..
Another thing about passed pawns. if you have a pawn majority even by 1, and you can not promote your passed pawn, push it anyway. Force the enemy King to capture it, thus moving away from their own pawns, so your King can pick those up. This only works if you have more than one pawn.
What I like about this vid – and basically all of Chess Vibes vids – is you learn something right out of the gate, but it is also worthwhile coming back and reviewing as you improve; as you get slightly better you can a) review the advice, and b) see how the advice applies in a slightly more complex way.
Very helpful!
If I recall correctly, isn't it true that perpetual check is the repetition of the same position, NOT the same moves??
Thank you for explaining Zugzwang. I saw Eric Rosen's class on end games, and he said the term many times, but never defined it.
Excellent explanations. I learnt a lot!
6:19, 11:07, 13:41, 14:48 These principles came out handy for me
this is gold
Knight's can't lose a tempo. You to put the bishop on the left side of the king and the black king can move on the left side is a yes, and the knight you put the kinght over the (G6, knight) and check and the king can move the leftside and done!
really good video bro, thank You!
Great work man
"sugzwรคnng "….
You are appreciated for your beautiful explanation!
The position at 10:04 with opposite color bishops… looks winning for white… like Ba3… and then b4 to make a passed pawn… I think I could win that… if en passant then the move c4 becomes a passed pawn as well.
The horse, Bishop and King vs King endgame is challenging to learn, took me hours to consistently win that position
Amazing information! I canโt believe itโs free! Thank you! ๐๐ปโค๏ธ
At 5:30, what if knight goes to f4, d5, then c7, forcing a check and then captures the queen?
Nice video! Very informative. But you have to learn how to pronounce Zugzwang ๐
I played out the position where you used to the rook to cut off the king, then theoretically march the king and pawn up forcing a sacrifice. But couldnโt black just endlessly check the king anytime it comes up alongside the pawn to support its advance? I got stuck just going around the pawnโฆbut I also donโt think it be 3-fold repโฆam I missing something here?
the best ever series about chess prinicples from different stages!!! respect!
excellent videos. Can you do a playlist of the pirc and king's indian defence and king's indian attack?
These vids rock man. suuuper easy to follow and informative. thnx for what u do
Suggswang
A freaking chess cheat sheet? New player here, your content is above and beyond.
it's not worth the time to learn a bishop and knight checkmate. you're better off practicing pawn or pawn and rook endgames which are far more common
Your videos are perfect ๐๐ป๐๐ป
When put to you Zugswang really sucks wang.
Well he want to say your knight is just fucked up when it comes to end game
Donโt move your bishop like rooks๐
Ty this helped me gonna go through description videos for step by step too
dont like the bishop suggestion, you make it more complicated than it has to be, just first take king out of center and then just push king back, you dont have to think about v-shapes, dont get me wrong it does work but very bad for beginner. It just takes too long and you risk lose because of 50 rule and also if king escapes you have to start over this v-shape and you will not be in time for 50 move. Actually easiest in this case is just to check endgame database and do it like that. Its way more easy to remember and its actually quite intuative.
On that last one, if you're playing against someone lower rated, you can try to sack the knight to get the king to move.
Depends on whether or not your opponent really cares about the draw lol
Moving the king to the center is a brilliant move, you avoid getting checkmated. I am gonna remember this.
Never mind Iโve tipped wrong
I will make my friends to watch your videos ๐
i used to play chess when as a kid, without even knowing their names i memorized the rules. now at 18 its been a month i continued and i'm getting good at this real fast. your videos help alot
Hey Great video man! thanks!
do you have something specifically on pawn structures in endgame how to play? different setups and situations how to deal with e.g. rook vs rook and few pawns
in the beginning, win the game. Details in the description.
16:20 yes but you can win on time
Nice,,,๐๐๐๐๐๐
13:43 "Zugzwang" literally move-urge german word, the urge to need to make a move but there are only moves available that worsen your position
I'm new to chess here so correct me if I'm wrong but Principle 23. with King G6, Pawn H6. A move with white Bishop to D5 would be checkmate as it prevents opponents King from moving? Thanks in advance
You are explaining wrong example of zugzwang. This is not example of zugzwang
Thanks!
16:12 This means White can only win in a timed game if it has noticeably more time available, aka the pettiest form of winning possible in chess.
3:40 Bro Playing Chess in ohio