Chess is a medieval-themed board game that tests your strategic thinking, position evaluation, experience, and more complex ideas. This board game may need lots of time and focus, but it can also benefit your real-world knowledge. And of course, while this does sound overwhelming at first, these essential tips can speed up and simplify your adventure.
Pieces
Getting to know your pieces is very important to support tactical vision. Pawns may move 1-2 squares from the start, and after the pawn moves, only 1 may be available. Knights dance in an L motion to any side, rooks can move horizontally or vertically to anywhere on the board, bishops do the same, only diagonally, and queens act as a rook and bishop combined. The king can only move 1 square in any direction and may castle if the rook and king haven’t moved and the line isn’t cut off by enemy sight.
Use Online Apps
Online apps, such as chess.com, can significantly add to the convenience in learning while in your condo at Amberwood at Holland, and provide many essential tools to support your growth, such as online playing, game reviews, and puzzles.
Longer Time-Controls
Longer time controls, with most recommended being rapid, can boost your learning significance rather than blitz or bullet. Rapid gives you time to think, learn, and evaluate more clearly, rather than lower-time controls, which can cause pressure and downfall.
Opening, Middlegame, And Endgames
In openings, you should stick to one setup from either color. Choose openings that have less risk, better development, and aggressive approaches. Middlegames should be where you attack the opponent’s king or take opportunities to win an advantage. While endgames must be to promote a passed pawn or take the opponent’s pawns.
Identify All Useful Moves Possible
Before committing to a move, ask yourself if there are any other moves that you may have missed that prove better or meet your original goals. This is the way to avoid tunnel vision.
Improve Your Pieces
If there’s not much you can do, try to improve your laziest piece in the position, not pawns. This can slowly turn the tide and bring more pressure to the opponent’s side.
Ask Yourself: The Effect of Your Move
Before you make a move, ask yourself, can my opponent seize anything, or does this affect my position? This can lower your rate of blunders and allow for smoother gameplay.



