What was it like for you when you started to get past beginner elo ranges like 800 and higher?

Was it very gradual improvements or did anything help you jump up some notches or a mix of both?

Currently I’m just palying puzzles and chess.com bots until I can’t go no more, presently I am able to sometimes beat 800+ elo bots but I can never seem to break 200 elo games against people

  • owenfromcanada@lemmy.ca
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    7 hours ago

    For me, each step seems to have corresponded with hearing a new piece of advice and gradually learning to apply it.

    For example, “don’t play hope chess” or “don’t force your opponent to make a good move” were both things that I had to work at, but once they clicked, my competency felt a lot better. And each thing only made sense once I was at a point to understand it and ready to start applying it.

  • sniggleboots@europe.pub
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    4 hours ago

    In my personal experience, playing the chess.com lower elo bots to improve is complete ass. They make mistakes players of the same rating very rarely make, just nonsensical moves. They also rarely punish blunders you make, so you’re not learning much at all. The same goes for the game analysis tool. Sometimes it will flag you for an inaccuracy or mistake, and will feed you a 10 move line where you lose a pawn in the end. Useless for beginners and even intermediate players.

    I improved the most by watching Aman Hambleton’s habits series, followed by one of his many “speedruns” in a particular opening. Habits will teach you great fundamentals, and an opening (especially a “system”) will show you more specific examples of where the pieces should go (in that opening).

    Paired with daily puzzle solving, progress is quick. I recommend Lichess’ puzzles, because they’re unlimited and free. You can choose a specific topic to practice each day, for example, so you know what to look for, and then once or twice a week mix it all together to test whether you can recognize the patterns.

  • pirc_lover@feddit.uk
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    7 hours ago

    Personally I find that improvement follows the conscious/subconscious competence cycle.

    I’ll be exploring a new concept — maybe a new opening, integrating a new middle game concept, learning about a new pawn structure — and my rating will drop a bit as I’m not as smooth in using it and it’s not well oiled. Then I get better at it, and it slowly beds in as something I don’t have to think about, and my rating goes up to more than it was before.

    I’d recommend not playing to destruction, however. If you want to improve, I’d recommend having a look at a few videos of GMs playing and explaining concepts. It’s like science — you wouldn’t expect to reach an understanding of relativity using the scientific method from scratch in one lifetime; you attend a few lectures to get the grounding you need to then build on. Happy to recommend specific resources if you’d like.

    • confuser@lemmy.zipOP
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      3 hours ago

      +1 for aman A friend reccomended aman to me too I made a chess tips cheat sheet based on some of his videos, I’d hare the sheet now for lurkers but I’m on my phone and its on my PC and printed to keep with the chess board

      • pirc_lover@feddit.uk
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        2 hours ago

        Yes, Aman is good. The gold standard is of course Daniel Naroditsky, who sadly passed away last year. His speedruns are very good, but tough for me to watch now.

        In terms of general resources, I’d also recommend lichess.org/practice. These introduce a lot of the basic skills (e.g. simple checkmates and tactical motifs like pins and skewers). These help a lot with getting the piece coordination instilled in your brain :)