5/2/2024 – The TePe Sigeman & Co tournament is taking place from 27 April to 3 May at the Elite Plaza Hotel in Malmö, Sweden. The tournament is an 8-player single round-robin featuring Nodirbek Abdusattorov, Arjun Erigaisi and Vincent Keymer as the top seeds. Defending champion Peter Svidler and women’s world champion Ju Wenjun are also in the mix. | Follow the games live starting at 15.00 CEST (9.00 ET, 18.30 IST)
It is the program of choice for anyone who loves the game and wants to know more about it. Start your personal success story with ChessBase and enjoy the game even more.
It is the program of choice for anyone who loves the game and wants to know more about it. Start your personal success story with ChessBase and enjoy the game even more.
Anyone who seriously deals with openings cannot avoid the opening encyclopaedia. Whether beginner or grandmaster. The Opening Encyclopaedia is by far the most comprehensive chess theory work: over 1,463(!) theory articles offer a huge fund of ideas!
5/2/2024 – Gukesh won the Candidates Tournament, but India's official number one is Arjun Erigaisi, who currently plays in the TePe Sigeman tournament. In his new Game of the Week show, Merijn van Delft takes a look at one of Erigaisi's games from this tournament. | Merijn’s show is available on-demand with a ChessBase Premium Account. You can register a Premium account here.
5/2/2024 – GM Yair Parkhov from Israel (born 2002) is the man of the hour at the Sardinia World Chess Festival: After defeating top seed Vladimir Fedoseev in round 5 he is sole leader with 5.5/6. In round 7, Parkhov will have Black against GM Maksim Chigaev. The famous streamers Andrea and Alexandra Botez also play in Sardinia and stream their games live with commentary by Jon-Ludvig Hammer and Dina Belenkaya. Round 7 starts at 15:00 local time (9:00 ET).
5/2/2024 – In the new world rankings published by FIDE on 1st May, Gukesh D, the winner of the Candidates, has made a big leap forward: 20 extra rating points have lifted the 17-year-old Indian from 16th to 6th place. Gukesh is now one point ahead of Ding Liren, the reigning FIDE World Champion, whom he will challenge later this year. Fabiano Caruana, Hikaru Nakamura and Ian Nepomniachtchi have also picked up a few points in the Candidates and are now ranked second to fourth behind Magnus Carlsen.
5/2/2024 – The new ChessBase Magazine #219 offers complete mobile access again with the ChessBase book format. All analyses, repertoire articles, videos and training exercises can be loaded directly in your web browser! In this and the coming weeks, we will be presenting the new issue to you in a series of free reading samples. We start with Lars Schandorff's opening article on the Caro-Kann Advance Variation. After the moves 1.e4 c6 2.d4 d5 3.e5 Bf5 4.h4 h6!? he recommends White to start the game with a sequence of nine pawn moves! Can that be good? Check the free CBM reading sample of the week!
5/2/2024 – Peter Svidler defeated Anton Korobov to climb to shared first place at the TePe Sigeman & Co. Tournament in Malmö. Svidler, the defending champion, is now sharing the lead with Arjun Erigaisi, who drew Vincent Keymer with the white pieces. The co-leaders will face each other in Thursday’s sixth round. | Photo: tepesigemanchess.com
5/2/2024 – "We held the magazine to await the outcome of the Candidates," writes the Executive Editor of CHESS Magazine, London. 17-year-old Dommaraju Gukesh became the youngest world title challenger in the history of the game, and will take on Ding Liren later this year in the first ever all-Asian match for the world title. Malcolm has analysed a couple of games from the Candidates.
5/1/2024 – To play openings like a grandmaster - that's probably what most ambitious amateurs want. The first and not so easy step is to choose openings for your own repertoire. Would you like to do this with a world-class grandmaster? Of course you would! In the new two-part video course "A Supergrandmaster's Guide to Openings with Anish Giri", Anish Giri introduces (almost) all openings in an instructive way, categorises their relevance and tells fascinating stories from the world of elite chess.
5/1/2024 – Ju Wenjun took down Vincent Keymer with the black pieces in round 4 of the TePe Sigeman & Co. Tournament. Keymer, who was sharing the lead after three rounds, now stands a half point behind co-leaders Arjun Erigaisi and Anton Korobov. One more game ended decisively in Malmö, with Nodirbek Abdusattorov getting the better of Nils Grandelius. | Photo: Mikael Svensson, tepesigemanchess.com
5/1/2024 – The colorful Chess Houseboat 2024 tournament will take place from 23rd to 30th November 2024. It is once again scheduled to take place at God's own country, the state of Kerala. . The new attractions this year are the three different places of stay: at the floating houseboat itself in the Vembanadu lake, a beachfront resort at Trivandrum, the capital city of Kerala, and a majestic Dutch fort at Cochin. Apart from the usual Rapid tournament, this time there will also be a Blitz tournament. If all these pique your interest, you must register before 1st June to get early bird discount. Check out all details of the entire event and itinerary, written by IM V Saravanan. Photo: Orient Chess Moves
4/30/2024 – The Queen's Indian Defense is one of the most solid defenses against 1.d4. From a rock-solid position, the black player can pursue many ideas and plans without having to worry about coming under quick pressure. In this video course, the young Indian Grandmaster Leon Mendonca presents the most solid black responses in various variations.
4/30/2024 – Prague Masters 2024: analyses by tournament winner Nodirbek Abdusattorov as well as Erwin l'Ami, David Navara, Thai Dai Van Nguyen, Praggnanandhaa and many more. - "Special" on Fabiano Caruana: CBM authors show their favourite games of the world no. 2 - exclusive collection of 26 annotated games from 2007 to 2023 – A fresh English repertoire: Felix Blohberger presents an idea based on the game Gukesh-Navara from the Prague Masters 2024 with 3.e3 and 4.Qb3 (video) – Everything okay for Black: Sergey Grigoriants updates 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.f3 d5!? – Active defence: Jan Markos shows in his series "Practical tips for the tournament player" which strategy you should pursue in a pressure situation – Endgames with knight versus pawn(s): "Knight check shadow", "Karpov distance" and what else you need to know, part #9 of Dr Karsten Mueller’s video course and much more.
4/30/2024 – The World Rapid & Blitz Cadet Chess Championship 2024, organized by FIDE and the Albanian Chess Federation at the Fafa Resort & Spa Hotel in Durres, Albania, is in the books. The competition took place from April 25-29, bringing together 375 participants from 43 countries in rapid and 336 players from 43 countries for the Blitz event.
Anyone who seriously deals with openings cannot avoid the opening encyclopaedia. Whether beginner or grandmaster. The Opening Encyclopaedia is by far the most comprehensive chess theory work: over 1,463(!) theory articles offer a huge fund of ideas!
In this video course we’ll have a look at the Queen’s Indian after 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 b6. We’ll explore the ins and outs of the possible White setups against this rock-solid opening.
Prague Chess Festival 2024 with analyses by Abdusattorov, Navara, Pragg and many more. Opening videos by Felix Blohberger, Christian Bauer and Nico Zwirs. 11 repertoire articles from Reti to King's Indian and much more.
Queen's Indian Powerbase 2024 is a database and contains 9687 high level games from Mega 2024 and the Correspondence Database 2024, of which 680 are annotated.
The Queen's Indian Powerbook 2024 has a tree structure which is based on a mixture of over 465 000 complete chess games played in the Engine room of playchess.com and the best games played by humans (98 000).
This video course includes GM Anish Giri's deep insights and IM Sagar Shah's pertinent questions to the super GM. In Vol.1 all the openings after 1.e4 are covered.
This video course includes GM Anish Giri's deep insights and IM Sagar Shah's pertinent questions to the super GM. In Vol.1 all the openings after 1.e4 are covered.
This video course includes GM Anish Giri's deep insights and IM Sagar Shah's pertinent questions to the super GM. While Vol.1 dealt with 1.e4, Vol.2 has all the openings after 1.d4 as well as 1.c4 and sidelines are covered.
4/30/2024 – Ulviyya Fataliyeva is European Women's Champion 2024. The International Master from Azerbaijan dominated the tournament from beginning to end and led by one point going into the final round. With a last-round-draw against her closest rival, Nino Batiashvili, Fataliyeva secured the title. | Photos: European Chess Union
4/30/2024 – Have you ever been there? You're happy with the advantage you've worked so hard for, you've been holding on to it for hours, and then: one mistake and the point goes down the drain! In his ChessBase video series "Understanding Middlegame Strategies", now in its ninth part, Ivan Sokolov, one of the world's best trainers, gives deep insights into his wealth of experience and reveals how to find the right moves in the future.
4/30/2024 – He was the coach of the USSR Youth National team from the mid-60s, until the collapse of the Soviet Union – a driving force behind the great generations of Soviet chess, but always in the shadow. On 30 April Anatoly Awraamowitsch Bykhovsky celebrates his 90th birthday. Chess Trainer Adrian Mykhalchyshyn describes the career of the man who helped created the chess zenith of the USSR.
4/30/2024 – The diagram position is from a game Hikaru Nakamura and Vishy Anand played in the Bundesliga. Black is a pawn down and obviously in trouble. However, there's a reason why Anand is well-known for his defensive skills. How did he save the game?
4/30/2024 – Arjun Erigaisi inflicted a third consecutive loss on Marc’Andria Maurizzi to join Vincent Keymer and Anton Korobov in the lead of the TePe Sigeman & Co. Tournament in Malmö. All three remaining games ended drawn, including the clash of co-leaders between Keymer and Korobov. | Photo: Mikael Svensson, tepesigemanchess.com
4/29/2024 – In his Endgame Magic Show #265 Karsten Müller continues to look at endgames from the Candidates Tournament in Toronto. In the last two episodes, Karsten discussed endgames from the Open Candidates Tournament, in this episode he takes a look the Women's Tournament. | You can watch the Endgame Magic Show on-demand with a ChessBase Premium account.
Anyone who seriously deals with openings cannot avoid the opening encyclopaedia. Whether beginner or grandmaster. The Opening Encyclopaedia is by far the most comprehensive chess theory work: over 1,463(!) theory articles offer a huge fund of ideas!
In this video course we’ll have a look at the Queen’s Indian after 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 b6. We’ll explore the ins and outs of the possible White setups against this rock-solid opening.
Prague Chess Festival 2024 with analyses by Abdusattorov, Navara, Pragg and many more. Opening videos by Felix Blohberger, Christian Bauer and Nico Zwirs. 11 repertoire articles from Reti to King's Indian and much more.
Queen's Indian Powerbase 2024 is a database and contains 9687 high level games from Mega 2024 and the Correspondence Database 2024, of which 680 are annotated.
The Queen's Indian Powerbook 2024 has a tree structure which is based on a mixture of over 465 000 complete chess games played in the Engine room of playchess.com and the best games played by humans (98 000).
This video course includes GM Anish Giri's deep insights and IM Sagar Shah's pertinent questions to the super GM. In Vol.1 all the openings after 1.e4 are covered.
This video course includes GM Anish Giri's deep insights and IM Sagar Shah's pertinent questions to the super GM. In Vol.1 all the openings after 1.e4 are covered.
This video course includes GM Anish Giri's deep insights and IM Sagar Shah's pertinent questions to the super GM. While Vol.1 dealt with 1.e4, Vol.2 has all the openings after 1.d4 as well as 1.c4 and sidelines are covered.
€49.90
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