syzygy
Top 35 principles of Chess: Control the center / Develop pieces quickly / Knights before Bishops / Don't move the same piece twice in the opening / Don't bring your Queen out too early / Castle before move 10 / Connect your rooks / Rooks should go to open or half-open files / Knights on the rim are grim / Try to avoid doubled pawns / Try to avoid isolated pawns / Try to avoid backward pawns / Don't trade a Bishop for a Knight without a good reason / Avoid moving pawns in front of your castled King / Don't open the center if your King is still there / 2 minor pieces are usually better than a rook and a pawn / 3 minor pieces are usually better than a Queen / Rooks are good on the 7th rank / Doubled rooks on an open file are very strong / Bishops are better in open positions, Knights are better in closed positions / The best way to deal with a flank attack, is with a counter attack in the center / When 2 pieces can capture the same piece, capture towards the center / The king should be activated in the end game / Rooks go behind passed pawns / 2 connected passed pawns in the 6th rank will beat a rook / Attack the base of a pawn chain / Knights are usually the best piece to use to blockade a pawn / If your position is cramped, trading pieces can help / Trade your passive pieces for your opponents active pieces / When ahead material, trade pieces, not pawns / When behind material, trade pawns, not pieces / Games with opposite colored Bishops are dangerous in the middle game, and drawish in the endgame / Don't play "hope" chess / When you see a good move, look for a better move / A really good chess player knows the right time to ignore a chess principle
39
Male
United States
Joined: 
Last seen: 
1 hour ago
Influential
39
About
Bullet Chess 2
All games
Bullet Chess 2 statistics
746
rating
Grand Master
223matches
82%
wins
(183)
292usual opponent rating
Rating History
Results
Opponent
Result
Rating
Opponent rating
Yesterday
1 - 0
744
2
229
Yesterday
1 - 0
738
6
466
Yesterday
1 - 0
735
3
312
3 days ago
1 - 0
734
1
125
4 days ago
(415)
1 - 0
730
4
415
5 days ago
2 - 0
729
1
60
5 days ago
1 - 0
726
3
333
6 days ago
(85)
1 - 0
725
1
85
1 week ago
1 - 0
724
1
58
1 week ago
(484)
0 - 1
750
-26
484
2 weeks ago
(294)
1 - 0
748
2
294
2 weeks ago
1 - 0
744
4
427
1 month ago
1 - 0
752
5
475
1 month ago
(258)
1 - 0
750
2
258
1 month ago
0 - 1
780
-26
515
1 month ago
1 - 0
779
1
93
1 month ago
1 - 0
778
1
224
1 month ago
(513)
1 - 0
772
6
513
1 month ago
(214)
1 - 0
775
1
214
Last seen: 
Joined: 
Top 35 principles of Chess: Control the center / Develop pieces quickly / Knights before Bishops / Don't move the same piece twice in the opening / Don't bring your Queen out too early / Castle before move 10 / Connect your rooks / Rooks should go to open or half-open files / Knights on the rim are grim / Try to avoid doubled pawns / Try to avoid isolated pawns / Try to avoid backward pawns / Don't trade a Bishop for a Knight without a good reason / Avoid moving pawns in front of your castled King / Don't open the center if your King is still there / 2 minor pieces are usually better than a rook and a pawn / 3 minor pieces are usually better than a Queen / Rooks are good on the 7th rank / Doubled rooks on an open file are very strong / Bishops are better in open positions, Knights are better in closed positions / The best way to deal with a flank attack, is with a counter attack in the center / When 2 pieces can capture the same piece, capture towards the center / The king should be activated in the end game / Rooks go behind passed pawns / 2 connected passed pawns in the 6th rank will beat a rook / Attack the base of a pawn chain / Knights are usually the best piece to use to blockade a pawn / If your position is cramped, trading pieces can help / Trade your passive pieces for your opponents active pieces / When ahead material, trade pieces, not pawns / When behind material, trade pawns, not pieces / Games with opposite colored Bishops are dangerous in the middle game, and drawish in the endgame / Don't play "hope" chess / When you see a good move, look for a better move / A really good chess player knows the right time to ignore a chess principle