List of chess openings

Chess openings are listed and classified according to their first few moves. There are interesting statistics on the frequency of chess openings from chess databases.

Statistics

1800–1900 1901–1935 Modern
e4–e5 (64%) e4–e5 (31%) e4–e5 (15%)
e4 other (23%) e4 other (20%) e4 other (35%)
d4–d5 (10%) d4–d5 (28%) d4–d5 (15%)
d4 other d4 other (16%) d4 other (23%)
other (5%) other (12%)

The table shows how common each opening was for each era. It shows movement away from symmetrical defences and an increase in asymmetrical defences. In reply to 1.e4, the Sicilian and French Defence, and to 1.d4 the Indian defences become more common. It also shows an increased use of the English Opening for White.[1]

King's Pawn openings

KP opening: 1.e4 e5
Start of chess board.
a8 black rook b8 black knight c8 black bishop d8 black queen e8 black king f8 black bishop g8 black knight [[Image:chess rd

d44.png|22px|alt=h8 black rook]]

a7 black pawn b7 black pawn c7 black pawn d7 black pawn e7 black king f7 black pawn g7 black pawn [[Image:chess pd

l44.png|22px|alt=h7 black pawn]]

a6 black king b6 black king c6 black king d6 black king e6 black king f6 black king g6 black king [[Image:chess

d44.png|22px|alt=h6 black king|link=]]

a5 black king b5 black king c5 black king d5 black king e5 black pawn f5 black king g5 black king [[Image:chess

l44.png|22px|alt=h5 black king|link=]]

a4 black king b4 black king c4 black king d4 black king e4 white pawn f4 black king g4 black king [[Image:chess

d44.png|22px|alt=h4 black king|link=]]

a3 black king b3 black king c3 black king d3 black king e3 black king f3 black king g3 black king [[Image:chess

l44.png|22px|alt=h3 black king|link=]]

a2 white pawn b2 white pawn c2 white pawn d2 white pawn e2 __ f2 white pawn g2 white pawn [[Image:chess pl

d44.png|22px|alt=h2 white pawn]]

a1 white rook b1 white knight c1 white bishop d1 white queen e1 white king f1 white bishop g1 white knight [[Image:chess rl

l44.png|22px|alt=h1 white rook]]

End of chess board.
{{{67}}}

1...e5 replies

Asymmetric replies

Queen's Pawn openings

1...d5 replies

Other opening moves

Sources

Sources for beginners

There are few opening book for beginners. Some degree of understanding is needed before the details of an opening can be grasped. The endgame and middlegame should be studied before opening theory. The following books show complete games with elementary explanations of the moves:

  • Chernev, Irving 1998. Logical chess: move by move. London:Batsford. ISBN 0-7134-8464-0
  • Chandler, Murray 2004. Chess for children. London:Gambit. ISBN 978-1904600060
  • King, Daniel 2000. Chess: from first moves to checkmate. London:Kingfisher. Illustrated, 64 pages. ISBN 0-7534-0447-8
  • Pritchard, David Brine 2008. The right way to play chess. 8th ed, Right Way. ISBN 978-0716021995
  • Wolff, Patrick 2005. The complete idiot’s guide to chess. 3rd ed, New York:Alpha. ISBN 0-02-861736-3

Other sources

None of these are suitable for beginners, but might be used by chess teachers and players of intermediate strength. Tip for teachers: always check the book's reviews.[2]

  • John Watson. Mastering the Chess Openings, Gambit Publications. Four volumes by a leading American author and chess coach.
  • Openings reference works:
    • Nick deFirmian et al. 2008. Modern chess openings, 15th ed, Random House N.Y. ISBN 0-8129-3682-5 (these two versions are almost identical)
    • John Nunn et al. 1999. Nunn's chess openings. Everyman, London. ISBN 1-85744-221-0

Related pages

References

  1. Watson, John 1998. Secrets of modern chess strategy. Gambit, London. Part 2: New ideas and the modern revolution. p93
  2. "John Watson's review columns". Archived from the original on 2012-03-08. Retrieved 2010-05-24.