I got a random app and just increased the difficulty as I start winning consistently. That helped train up a bit.
Chess.com is a pretty great resource.
A community for beginner's playing chess.
This is a safe space for chess beginners, this includes your opponent, be respectful. Even if your opponent is not hanging around here
see also:
I got a random app and just increased the difficulty as I start winning consistently. That helped train up a bit.
Chess.com is a pretty great resource.
chescom is corporate garbage, all of the paid features on there are free on lichess
and people cheat on there CONSTANTLY
lichess and lots of speed chess…
also chess youtubers… hikaru is the best player who streams… gotham chess has a lot of more beginner videos….
I would highly recommend to get a book of chess games that's annotated by someone who knows what they're doing, and play through the games from it on a separate chessboard, reading the notes and how the person is describing the strategies and values at play during the game. That's what I did and it taught me a whole lot that I never would have really absorbed or come to on my own.
Do you have any particular books you would recommend?
I don't, sadly... I actually looked to try to find the book I used for it, but it's been so long that I couldn't properly remember what it was. Maybe go to the bookstore and pick up a few and see if they have the right structure (a series of games and then annotations of what's going on in them, and also if the author's text seems like something you vibe with).
Sorry if this is unhelpful lol... I looked over some books online but I'm not sure what is good and I don't want to give you some recommendation and then it not be worthwhile.
No that's cool, thanks for the advice! A couple I've seen recommended online are Chernev: "Logical Chess Move by Move" and Sierawan: "Winning Chess Brilliances", so I'll keep my eyes out for a used copy of one of those.
When I tried to understand the game better I found the lessons on chess.com helpfull. They introduced me to basic concepts like "the four squares in the middle.are the most powerfull ones" . I was also lucky to have a couple of ppl at uni who I'd play with. We weren't good, but we sometimes explained our moves to each other.