Question:
How to improve my chess?
2010-10-18 10:58:21 UTC
I want to improve my own chess so I could help my son's chess learning
Seven answers:
?
2010-10-18 21:37:29 UTC
Join a chess club - check out the link I posted in sources, for a club near you. There are a number of good books you can use to improve your game. You can play online, too - I would suggest, though, that you avoid playing against software. Part of becoming a good player is learning to recognize when your oponent makes a mistake and software mistakes tend not to be like human player mistakes.
Matt M
2010-10-18 12:11:08 UTC
A lot depends on your level of skill. A good series of books are the Winning Chess series by Yasser Seirawan.



After learning basic tactics and strategy, it's mostly a matter of learning to apply them. For this chess problems excel, as does going over your games after the fact and analyzing your mistakes..



As to programs, Rybka is the strongest engine, Fritz is great for analyzing your games after the fact, and Chessmaster actually has a pretty decent series of tutorials packaged with it.



You also might consider a subscription to chess.com, That would allow you use of Chess Mentor, which is basically a series of categorically sorted and graded chess problems designed to increase your understanding. "It's a very good program", in addition you gain access to their video's and lectures that will help with the nuances.



If you're starting out I highly suggest the winning chess series of books and any of the three previously mentioned programs.
2010-10-18 11:23:51 UTC
Fritz 8 is an excellent Chess PC Game which you can play on & learn from with tutorials and the like. There is also a greta book on the market called, not joke, "How to beat my son at chess"

Enjoy! :P
predmore
2016-10-19 08:08:46 UTC
sure they do strengthen your interest to an quantity. yet fixing puzzles all your life will take you nowhere. difficult your self against greater rated online combatants and examining video games performed via gradmasters, alongside with fixing puzzles will take you to dizzying heights once you're committed adequate and function adequate braing means. The puzzle often places the solver in awkward circumstances that have risen in genuine video games. some contain doubtless pointless sacrifices to win the sport, some do no longer, and a few have better than one answer. And different puzzles purely challenge you to pull a checkmate out of skinny air whilst no longer something looks achievable or whilst a interest is heading for a draw. the element to those puzzles is to make you think of. in case you get caught in a humorous concern, you do no longer experience like a stranger to the challenge getting your way out of traps or pulling acquaintances out of nowhere. TIP: In genuine video games, the quicker you notice a capture, the greater suited off you would be.
alec39
2010-10-18 21:47:31 UTC
The Game of Chess by Siegbert Tarrasch



http://www.amazon.com/Game-Chess-Algebraic-Siegbert-Tarrasch/dp/1880673940/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1287461974&sr=1-1



The book by Tarrasch is excellent it'll help you build a solid foundation in the fundamentals of good Chess



Complete Chess Workout by Richard Palliser



http://www.amazon.com/Complete-Chess-Workout-puzzles-Everyman/dp/1857445325/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1287462829&sr=1-1-spell



Building your tactical skills is a must this book has 1200 problems all computer checked solving lots of tactical problems again and again helps improve your board vision



Getting better is practice (studying is only a part of improvement) you have to play lots of chess to gain experience (slow games at 45 minutes and 60 is best not too much blitz)



http://www.amazon.com/Chess-Exam-Training-Guide-Yourself/dp/0975476122/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1287462171&sr=1-1



The training guides by Igor Khmelnitsky are very useful follow up tools they can help you assess where you are as a player you can rate yourself he'll tell you what areas of your game still need improvement and work its good!



http://www.amazon.com/Chess-Exam-Training-Guide-Yourself/dp/0975476114/ref=pd_bxgy_b_img_b



This is the training guide for tactics



Best of luck in your improvement!
The Green Bishop
2010-10-19 02:49:06 UTC
To improve your chess, you can get information from library books and online.

Getting Better at Chess: play and practice, read and study, and have fun.

  •   http://www.Chess.com/learn-how-to-play-chess.html#better



The United States Chess Federation

USCF Home New to Chess? Ten Tips To Winning Chess

  •   http://Main.USChess.org/content/view/9111/28/



More chess tips:

  •   Chess Tips and Lessons http://www.BeginnerChess.org/

  •   Improving Tips http://www.ChessCorner.com/tutorial/improving_tips.htm

  •   Winning Tips http://www.ChessCorner.com/tutorial/Intermediate/winning/winning_tips.htm

  •   64 Tips, Hints, Pointers, and Precepts http://www.HowToAdvice.com/Chess/

  •   101 Chess Tips http://www.101ChessTips.com/



One piece of advice for improving initial results is to avoid giving away free pieces.



Join a chess club - check out the link I posted in sources, for a club near you.

Source(s):

Expect good thing to happen from joining a local chess club.

US Chess Federation — Chess Clubs by State:

  •   http://Main.USChess.org/assets/msa_joomla/AffiliateSearch/
?
2010-10-18 15:08:13 UTC
This is where I play now



http://www.chessclub.com/



You can try it for a couple weeks, but it's 60 bucks a year - you play against all types, including masters.


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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