My most recent blog post for chess.com :-:

this is my most recent blog post on cc I was bored so I also put it ehre

Oh alright I just havent seen these on the forum till now

Seen what?

Ads? Spams?

the โ€œchess blogsโ€

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Why is this flagged? I was just asking a question?

hmm itโ€™s not relevant to the conversation we determined already that it isnโ€™t a spam post

@OY IF YOU BECOME MOD OPEN LOUNGE BACK UP

he cant its supposed to be secure

Why

tl3+

I play chess

also can you please use spellcheck

for small posts, its fine, but these massive paragraphs really need spellcheck

Use context before flagging

REMEMBER EVERYONE, FLAG WITH CARE :smiley:

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In actual response to the main post unless your really good,
Mistakes to best you can basically ignore. Because if your a low Elo player (like me), your always gonna not see some stuff. Brilliant moves are really rare, and for some reason moving out of check counts as a great move sometimes.

Also the analysis is heavily geared to like GMs and other really good players. Sometimes youโ€™ll get a missed win and the best move would be a pawn sac check or smth that no 500 Elo playerโ€™s gonna see.

Hmm

yeah but the actual lounge chat is deleted


it would still be tl3+ if that happened

is this better?

Good afternoon chess players

In this blog, Iโ€™m going to explain why itโ€™s imperative to analyze a game.

So after playing a game, it gives you the option to analyze the game, but why do you want to do this?

Analyzing games allows you to go through each move that was played, both by you and your opponent, and see what blunders were made, as well as which move was a missed win, an excellent move, a mistake, etc.

What is the point of doing this?

Doing this allows you to realize, โ€œHey, I played g4, and now I see itโ€™s a blunder. I should have instead played Bxd5# and could have ended the game there.โ€

So analyzing it lets you see that missed win and know for next time that you need to take it more slowly in order to prevent the same mistake.

Different types of ways your move can be classified and what each one means:

  • Blunder: This is a move that you played, and it was bad. You just did something that might have resulted in you losing your piece or changed the entire projection of where the game could have gone.
  • Mistake: This move wasnโ€™t the best move. Itโ€™s not really benefiting you but doesnโ€™t change the game much.
  • Good: This move wasnโ€™t the ultimate solution to what you should have played. You captured a piece or moved into a spot that can later help you gain material.
  • Inaccuracy: This move is similar to a mistake, only it could have been a good move, but you played it inaccurately, like at the wrong time or too late.
  • Brilliant: Wow, this move is really good. It benefited the game a lot and changed how the game could play out.
  • Great move: This move changed the gameโ€™s playout, or you captured a piece that just foiled a plan for your opponent.
  • Excellent: Wow, this move is as good as it gets. Youโ€™re limited to a small number of moves that benefit you, and you just played one of them.
  • Best move: This was the best move of all. Out of all the moves you could have done, this was the best one.
  • Best move (forced): This doesnโ€™t happen a lot, but it does happen after youโ€™ve been forced to do a move and it was the best move anyway.
  • Alternative: Similar to the best move, this move is what you played if you couldnโ€™t do the best move.
  • Missed win: You could have played a move that allowed you to win, but instead, you played a different one.
  • Book move: These are usually the first few moves of a game. These moves are openings that are known, like the Reti or the Queenโ€™s Gambit.

Hope this helped

@diamonds_and_netherite

Chatgpt, but it looks better lol
and no spelling mistakes :slight_smile:

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yeh he may have changed it though

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yeah this is pretty good, also this @diamonds_and_netherite doesnโ€™t actually ping anyone

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