Learning Chess The Easy Way – Chessbase News
Learning Chess The Easy Way
Unless youre a competitive chess player, you probably hold a number of misconceptions about the game.
You might think chess players are smart people, or that learning to play chess well is correlated with intelligence. You might think chess is hard, or that you hopelessly suck, and its an impossibly tall task to consistently beat that one friend or relative who is the reigning champ. You might think chess is boring, that its an activity youre not well suited for.
I used to think all of these things. I was wrong.
My dad taught me chess when I was five or six years old. He did it in the same boring way that most dads teach anything. First, he told me a bunch of stuff. We went through each piece and how it moves. He laboriously enumerated the rules of turn-taking and capturing and checkmate.
Next, we tried playing a game. This may have taken place many months later. I was probably too frustrated learning a million arbitrary piece movements to play a weird, annoyingly complicated board game with my father in the first sitting.
And of course, playing the game felt more like a chore than a reward. I would be absolutely clobbered on the board and frequently told I was explicitly wrong or implicitly stupid for missing obvious things. Ah, did you consider this move son? Or what happens if you try this instead? Many a dad just cant help himself in pointing out corrections a bit more frequently than others are comfortable with.
On rare occasions, I would be momentarily fooled by my dads goofy playacting. If he let me win or inconspicuously guided me to capture a piece, I felt accomplished. Id entertain brief hopes that there might be an easy road to better results. Maybe my feeble little braincouldwithstand the cold crushing complexity, the labyrinthine logic of chess. Such hopes would die as soon as I was reminded of our status roles as father and son, chess authority versus chess learner.
Finally, inevitably, I would leave the board feeling essentially humiliated. This feeling was often accompanied by a fit of childish rage, an I hate you, I hate chess monologue, and perhaps some pieces flying across the room. In hindsight, I could have skipped the chess entirely, reclaiming my precious youth instead by flinging things and smiling while gleefully shoutingwingardium leviosa!
Despite whatever tricks and treats my dad attempted to leverage for the sake of the well-intentioned chess interaction, it always felt mildly painful. And this dynamic continued foryears. I remained trapped in chess learning for normal people mode until I was twice my starting age. I guess there are far worse things out there, but still, it wasnt the bestit was the hard way.
Youve probably experienced this mode of learning in your life, whether its with a parent, teacher, student, friend, or romantic partner. The activity variescooking, painting, video games, cleaning, bird watching, golfbut the outcome rarely deviates. The teacher fails to inspire, and the student is left with a lingering sense of Id prefer if we didnt do that. Its simply not fun; its an unpleasant situation to be avoided or escaped.
I found my way out in middle school, when a group of friends started to play chess in the cafeteria during indoor recess on rainy days. We competed as peers, exploring the game together. There was a lot more pure joy, a lot more dynamism and engaged interaction, when we played. And we stumbled upon a real treasure in the team chess variant known as bughouse.
In bughouse, you pass captured pieces to your partner for them to place at leisure on their board. The game is fast-paced, exotic, and exciting when compared with normal chess. There are wild, surprising swings when a piece lands in the middle of the opponents army, as if it were an alien beamed down from outer space. Add to that the competitive aspect of middle schoolers rotating in and out on teams, king-of-the-hill style, and you can quickly see how this game was more addictive than many multiplayer video games.
MVL and Carlsen play some bughouse against Caruana and Aronian
The fun of bughouse led to my joining the chess club in high school. With a newly cemented foundation of enthusiasm, I learned to study chess in earnest and play in serious competitions. Notably, it was only after a couple years of devoted study and play that I first began to appreciate the life skills and metaphors that chess is so publicly symbolic of.
The importance of planning for the future, of evaluating options and making tough decisions, staying calm under pressure, and working hard to improve oneselfall these things do not come in a rush to the student of chess. In fact, they probably come much sooner to people learning virtually any other sport or activity!
With basketball, you learn to handle the ball, pass it around, and refine your aim towards the hoop. The mechanics can take a while, but you understand the contours of the journey fairly immediately with your body. So you enroll in the journey and learn from it within that framework. You can see how sports relate to life, teamwork, discipline, planning,et ceterafairly immediately after a couple practice sessions with a coach or training partner. Because youre not so hung up on the rules or environment.
Chess is different. You typically have to spend a ton of time learning the physics of chess first! It takes many weeks if not months for a dedicated student of the game to transition from novice to beginner level. In all my years playing chess with family as a kid, I never learned the core basic skills, let alone the full fancy rules ofen passantor castling. I would say I, like many others (and perhaps you) stayed a chess-exposed novice for a very long time without any significant progress or joy.
Reflecting on this journey, I now see how it could have been accelerated. I could have bypassed the initial years by jumping straight into the middle school peer experience of fun chess and bughouse. Then I could have moved more quickly to the high school challenge of getting intimate with the game.
Well have to save the full story of my chess career for another time, but I will mention one more interesting milestonewhen I became the father figure in high school, trying and failing to teach chess to my little sister! It was hard to convey why chess was interesting at all, and I now deeply regret crushing her without mercy through the years. I wish I had known then what I know now
So lets dive in (to this one weird secret trick that doctors hate):learning chess can be done quickly and transformatively through minigames! The starting place is Bishops + Rooks.
This is a minigame in which white moves a bishop first, then black moves a rook, and whoever captures a piece first wins. Its a draw with best play, but getting to that skill level may take a second grader a month of lessons. During this time, she will get a ton of instructive value from playing the minigame again and again.
I could say a lot more about Bishops + Rooks and how to best utilize this teaching tool. Feel free to check out my written guidehereand explainer videoshere! Theres a whole suite of such content, including follow-on minigames like knight battleship, pawn wars, zombie chess, and more. For the purposes of this essay, Ill give one additional example here then wrap up with some concluding takeaways.
This minigame teaches King Opposition, and its a good starting place for adults who are quick to master Bishops + Rooks. I dont recommend it for younger kids until they are enthusiastic tournament players, since the exercise can feel too abstract and tedious.
As with Bishops + Rooks, standard piece movement rules apply, but the objective isnt checkmate. Instead, white tries to get the king to a8, b8, or c8 while blacks goal is to block this from happening with her king. Theres a forced win for white that makes beautiful use of the real-game principle called distant opposition which I wont explain here but encourage you to exploreyou can find plenty of practice online.
Ive found playing this minigame with interested or even tentative friends to be extremely rewarding. Following up with king and pawn vs king scenarios then queen / rook checkmates usually leads to an enlightening aha experience. The most common reaction is, Ive never seen chess like this before.
Starting with a couple pieces instead of a complete set is crucial to teaching and learning chess the easy way. With these minigames, novices have a well-defined environment in which they quickly come to grapple with the fundamental skill of chess: finding options, thinking through them rigorously, and deciding on reasonable onesin a word, strategy.
The easy way isnt meant to imply that learning chess or strategic thinking is easy. Rather, minigames are more understandable bite-sized chunks to chew on and engage with, when compared with traditional rote verbal methods that try and fail to teach everything at once.
Another benefit is the level playing field minigames create. An advanced friend and her beginner friend can engage in a realm where both sides stand a chance at winning, or at least not losing horribly and ambiguously. The person with less chess experience feels comfortable making mistakes because its more obvious how they themselves can detect and learn from them. Thats empowering.
Lectures never have this tangible, experiential quality, which is why I believe its best to dive into silently playing minigames as soon as possible. The more rules there are to explain and memorize up-front, the more likely it is that folks end up in the sorry state of chess learning for normal people. Dont make people learn chess the hard way!
If youre in the teachers seat, with anybody but especially with young children, please bear in mind that they may be unfamiliar with the process of navigating on their own. Chess can be one of the first experiences in a persons life when they really get toseethe complete physics of a contained situation and to operate fully autonomously within such an environment.
Be extra patient, watch silently, and let them explore on their own as much as possible. Allow the outcome of the game to teach them their mistakes. You dont need to point out the correct answers. Give them a fun time and the opportunity to play again. Debrief with questions like what did you learn from playing today or notice that was interesting to you? Its really wonderful how many doors open with this kind of self-propelled learning journey and accompanying self-confidence gains.
The truth is that chess can and should be stimulating and fun and empowering, from the beginning. Its inherently interactive, and although its a zero-sum competition over the board, its more importantly a series of tractable challenges which provide a medium for self-improvement and social engagement.
In the era of COVID-19, humankind is riding the swelling wave of screens and isolation. Now more than ever, its especially important to have these kinds of healthy media of exchange and growth with our friends, families, and children.
Find a partner and try out a minigame! Everyone can experience and appreciate what it means when I (and others) think of chess fondly. Its all about having the right tools and mindset to get started on a rainy day in a fun, approachable way.
This article first appeared at https://andytrattner.com/chess-the-easy-way.html. Republished with kind permission.
Read more:
Learning Chess The Easy Way - Chessbase News
- Gukesh, Praggnanandhaa fall behind at Zagreb Grand Chess Tour; Kush Maini secures first feature race podium: Indian Sports, July 5 - espn.in - July 6th, 2026 [July 6th, 2026]
- Who is the 11-year-old taking on adult chess players in Madison? - Wisconsin State Journal - July 6th, 2026 [July 6th, 2026]
- Chess federation suspends former world champion who accused Naroditsky of cheating - AP News - July 6th, 2026 [July 6th, 2026]
- FIDE names Best Creator Award in honour of Daniel Naroditsky International Chess Federation - FIDE - July 6th, 2026 [July 6th, 2026]
- Gukesh, Praggnanandhaa in action at Zagreb Grand Chess Tour: Indian Sports LIVE, July 5 - ESPN - July 6th, 2026 [July 6th, 2026]
- Former world chess champion banned after hounding rival before his death - The Telegraph - July 6th, 2026 [July 6th, 2026]
- FIDE sanctions Kramnik for bullying - Inside The Games - July 6th, 2026 [July 6th, 2026]
- Review: Chess, Royal Academy of Music - Everything Theatre - July 6th, 2026 [July 6th, 2026]
- Chess federation suspends former world champion who accused Naroditsky of cheating - Ottumwa Courier - July 6th, 2026 [July 6th, 2026]
- Vladimir Kramnik banned for 2 years, ordered to do 12 months of unpaid service - The Indian Express - July 6th, 2026 [July 6th, 2026]
- International Chess Federation bans Russian chess player for a year over death of American grandmaster - - July 6th, 2026 [July 6th, 2026]
- Well, Professor Pippin Barr, you've done it again: you've ruined chess - Rock Paper Shotgun - July 6th, 2026 [July 6th, 2026]
- Chess The Musical Review Susie Sainsbury Theatre - londontheatrereviews.co.uk - July 6th, 2026 [July 6th, 2026]
- Chess federation suspends former world champion who accused Naroditsky of cheating - Temple Daily Telegram - July 6th, 2026 [July 6th, 2026]
- Chess federation suspends former world champion who accused Naroditsky of cheating - Bluefield Daily Telegraph - July 6th, 2026 [July 6th, 2026]
- Chess federation suspends former world champion who accused Naroditsky of cheating - The Independent - July 6th, 2026 [July 6th, 2026]
- Chess federation suspends former world champion who accused Naroditsky of cheating - Eagle-Tribune - July 6th, 2026 [July 6th, 2026]
- ChessFest back in London as public get chance to take on grandmasters - The Guardian - July 3rd, 2026 [July 3rd, 2026]
- Making of Anthony Gordon: Chess with grandmaster to battering Big Dunc - The Times - July 3rd, 2026 [July 3rd, 2026]
- Born exactly 50 years after Garry Kasparov! How 13-year-old Maths Olympiad genius Pratitee Bordoloi became India's lone medallist at World Youth Chess... - July 3rd, 2026 [July 3rd, 2026]
- Meet the SenseRobot: The Unbeatable Chess Opponent - Yahoo Tech - July 3rd, 2026 [July 3rd, 2026]
- Opinion | In todays great game, Central Asian nations are no longer prizes to be won - South China Morning Post - July 3rd, 2026 [July 3rd, 2026]
- Indie Pop Duo Chess Club Soundtrack Summer Love With "Wedding Of The Year" - That Eric Alper - July 3rd, 2026 [July 3rd, 2026]
- How chess helped me manage my OCD - The Telegraph - July 3rd, 2026 [July 3rd, 2026]
- Game of the Week #728: Keymer vs Van Foreest - Chess News | ChessBase - July 3rd, 2026 [July 3rd, 2026]
- Help Team USA Regain Title as Best Team in the World - US Chess Federation - July 3rd, 2026 [July 3rd, 2026]
- World Youth Chess Championships conclude in grand style - Chess News | ChessBase - July 3rd, 2026 [July 3rd, 2026]
- Karnataka Government Discusses Bringing Global Chess League To Bengaluru - Rediff - July 3rd, 2026 [July 3rd, 2026]
- Dvorkovich launches third bid for FIDE presidency - Inside The Games - July 3rd, 2026 [July 3rd, 2026]
- Gukesh rises to joint second spot in Grand Chess Tour Croatia - ThePrint - July 3rd, 2026 [July 3rd, 2026]
- Chess player slashed at table in popular NYC park - New York Post - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Broadway Bids Adieu to Chess Celebrity Autobiography , and The Balusters June 21 - Playbill - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Magnus Carlsen hopes Norways return to World Cup will be new normal for team - South China Morning Post - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- 'Speed up your calculation': D Gukesh advised ahead of World Chess Championship match against Javokhir Si - The Times of India - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- 'Doomchessing' is the new digital addiction, as users flock to Chess.com - Press Review - France 24 - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Man slashed while playing chess in Union Square Park - CBS News - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Dragon Chilling complete golden double at the FIDE World Team Blitz Championship International Chess Federation - FIDE - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Film Grandmasters gives an intimate look into the world of competitive chess - PhotoBook Magazine - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Checkmate to cancer: A journey of resilience, hope and new beginnings through chess - Chess News | ChessBase - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- WTRBCC 2026: Dragon Chilling take control in Hong Kong International Chess Federation - FIDE - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Gurnaik Johal: Im addicted to chess, but its making me dumber - The Observer - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- A Memorable Journey to Indore: My Experience at the National Championship for the Specially Abled - ChessBase India - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Cowboys could add another chess piece for Christian Parker with sneaky trade - The Landry Hat - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- The untold story of ASXs $250m tech implosion - AFR - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Chess Federation of Russia suspended after CAS ruling - partially - Chess News | ChessBase - June 17th, 2026 [June 17th, 2026]
- Iran Is Playing Chess, Israel Is Playing Checkers and America Owns the Board - Haaretz - June 17th, 2026 [June 17th, 2026]
- More than just a game: Chess Club at UC Davis - The California Aggie - June 17th, 2026 [June 17th, 2026]
- Hong Kong joins global chess map as World Team Rapid and Blitz Chess Championships get underway - FIDE - June 17th, 2026 [June 17th, 2026]
- Author Ben Mezrich To Discuss Chess Scandal Behind New Book At Woodstock Event - Mountain Times - June 17th, 2026 [June 17th, 2026]
- ASIC Says ASX Agrees to Pay Fine Over Misleading Chess Statement - Bloomberg - June 17th, 2026 [June 17th, 2026]
- FIDE World Team Rapid and Blitz Championships 2026 officially open in Hong Kong International Chess Federation - FIDE - June 17th, 2026 [June 17th, 2026]
- KazChess and Dragon Chilling lead after day one of World Rapid Team Championship in Hong Kong - FIDE - June 17th, 2026 [June 17th, 2026]
- FIDE opens Shenzhen Office, ushering in a new era of international chess collaboration - FIDE - June 17th, 2026 [June 17th, 2026]
- Ohio State may have found its next chess piece on defense - Land-Grant Holy Land - June 17th, 2026 [June 17th, 2026]
- Documentary Chronicling Record-Breaking Chess Marathon Released On YouTube - Chess.com - June 17th, 2026 [June 17th, 2026]
- How chess 'boom' is building young minds - BBC - June 17th, 2026 [June 17th, 2026]
- ASX admits to misleading on CHESS software upgrade, agrees to $14.5 million penalty - Yahoo Finance - June 17th, 2026 [June 17th, 2026]
- All you need to know about FIDE World Team Rapid and Blitz Chess Championships - Firstpost - June 17th, 2026 [June 17th, 2026]
- ASX admits to misleading on CHESS, will pay $23.5m to close chapter - AFR - June 17th, 2026 [June 17th, 2026]
- ASX settles legal case over bungled Chess project - Finextra Research - June 17th, 2026 [June 17th, 2026]
- My Favorite Smart Chess Boards Are Perfect for Online and Offline Play - WIRED - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- I got my ass handed to me by a chess-playing robot and now I'm worried Magnus Carlsen may be cooked by AI - Tom's Guide - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Gukesh interview: Lately my strengths have been controlling me - The Indian Express - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Opinion: Iran is playing chess. Netanyahu is playing checkers. And Trump just wants to go home - The Globe and Mail - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Red Sox at Rays lineups: Playing chess? - Over the Monster - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- The Chess Row That Just Keeps Going And Going: Niemann Vs Nepo - World Chess - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Counter-UAS, other air-defense products from Chess Dynamics will show at Eurosatory 2026 - Military Embedded Systems - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Russias chess king and church head face new threat of EU visa sanctions - EUobserver - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Checkmate! Russia is suspended from world chess - The Times - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Chess: Magnus Carlsen has his worst tournament for 11 years - Financial Times - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Whats the Deal With: The Bellingham Chess Club? - Cascadia Daily News - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- FIDE Imposes Temporary Suspension on Russian Chess Federation - UNITED24 Media - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- The total number of possible chess games is so large that it exceeds the number of atoms in the observable universe by some estimates, there are more... - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Russian Chess Federation suspended over its activities in occupied Ukrainian territories - - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Tom McGrath analyzes chess pieces on May 26 at Crystal City Public Library. McGrath founded the club in 2023, hoping to share his own love of chess... - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Hyperbullet Is The Next Edition Of Chess.com Community Championships Starting June 18 - Chess.com - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Russia's Deadline To Stop Hosting Chess Events In Ukraine Passes: What Will FIDE Do? - World Chess - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- A Warhammer 40K racing game and a chess roguelike are free to claim on the Epic Games Store - Neowin - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Hong Kong to put a new generation of players on the world stage International Chess Federation - FIDE - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Game of the Week #725: Madaminov vs Nepomniachtchi - ChessBase - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]