
Why is Nf2 a blunder here? - Chess Forums
2020年6月14日 · After Nf2 he takes your B, Bxd6 forking your Rook and Knight. So, after loosing a B you have to decide what to do. After moving your Rook (Rf7) he takes your Knight. You have lost a B and N without any compensation. Now you take one of his Rooks, but you then lose your Knight. This exchange has cost you 2 Knights and a Bishop.
Learn This Unknown Opening in 10 Minutes (Nf2 Strategy)
2025年1月18日 · Unlock the power of the Nf2 strategy in this 10-minute chess tutorial! This unknown opening focuses on developing the Queen’s Knight from b1 to c3, then e4 or d1, and finally to f2, creating a...
Amar Opening: Krazy Kat Variation - Chess Openings
Learn the Amar Opening: Krazy Kat Variation with free tools and analysis from Chess.com. Improve your opening repertoire and crush your opponents!
r/chess on Reddit: How come Nf2 is an innaccuracy? Its a …
2023年4月5日 · Nf2+ isn't even in first four top moves. However, even after Nf2+ evaluation is above -7 (technically speaking, below) and black easily wins with rook and 2-3 pawns for a bishop.
What am I missing here? Why is Nf2 wrong move? Is that move ... - Reddit
2022年10月15日 · Nf2, then Qe2+, then however you resolve that check the rook just moves out of the way. Both pieces end up getting out of the fork. Knight takes c3 is the “better” fork. You’re at the very least trading off their light square bishop. And there is no Qe2+ because the knight covers that square.
Would someone explain this to me? - Chess Forums
2021年9月13日 · The idea is that after Nf2 forking the rooks, you play Nc7 and the knight become safe. Your knight is strong since it is in the opponent side, and after Nc7, and your opponent takes one of the rooks (Suppose he take h1 rook.
Nf2 is a queen blunder! Can you see the sequence I missed? : r/chess
2024年3月25日 · By playing Nf2, black blunders their queen. Whats the sequence for white? 1M subscribers in the chess community. All about the game of chess, including discussions on professional tournaments, game analysis and theory. If…
Corner Mate – CHESSFOX
Corner Mate, as the name suggests, is a checkmate pattern against an enemy king that is trapped in a corner. The actual checkmate is often executed by a knight. Diagram above: 1.Nf7+ demonstrates the checkmate pattern known as the Corner Mate. Note how the white rook on g1, with the help of the black pawn on h7, traps the black king in the corner.
ChessPub Forum - Kieseritsky with 7. Nf2
I don't trust it after 7.Be2 Nxe4 8.0-0 Qxh4 9.Rxf4 f5 10.d3 Ng3 11.Nf2 Nxe2+ 12.Qxe2+ Qe7. Instead of 10.d3 (blocking in the king's bishop), I'd prefer 10.d4!, e.g. 10...Ng3 11.Bb5+ c6 12.Qe1+ Be7 13.Nh2! with good play, or 10...Bg7 11.Bc4, keeping Black's king in the centre.
Chess Opening Theory/1. e4/1...e5/2. Nf3/2...Nf6 - Wikibooks
2025年1月9日 · The Petrov's Defence (or Russian Game) is a solid response to White's 2. Nf3. While this opening is often drawish and boring, it is still popular, and quite often played in …