New Chess Game, New Win
New Chess Game, New Win
[Event "Online Game"]
[Site "Checkmate Chess"]
[Date "2026.6.15"]
[Round "1"]
[White "nadeemrnc123"]
[Black "Guest"]
[Result "*"]
[TimeControl "600"]
[WhiteElo "890"]
[BlackElo "943"]
Analysis of the Game
1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Nc3 Bc5 4. Bb5 Qf6 5. d4 exd4 6. Bg5 Qe6 7. h4 dxc3 8.
bxc3 Qxe4+ 9. Be2 d6 10. Qd3 Qg4 11. Ne5 Qxg2 12. Bf3 Qg3 13. fxg3 f6 14. Qe2
fxe5 15. Rd1 h6 16. Bh5+ Kd7 17. Rf1 hxg5 18. Rf7+ Ke8 19. Qf3 Nh6 20. Rf8+ Ke7
21. Rd3 Rxf8 22. Qe4 Bf5 23. Qd5 Bxd3 24. Qxd3
The game contains several illegal moves (e.g., 16. Bh5+ from g5, 21. Rd3 from f8), suggesting possible notation errors. However, based on the critical early phase, White (you) gained a decisive advantage after Black blundered their queen.
Key moments:
· 3... Bc5 – reasonable development.
· 4... Qf6? – premature queen sortie; better to develop kingside.
· 6... Qe6? – leaves queen exposed.
· 7... dxc3 – Black captures a knight, but at a cost.
· 8... Qxe4+ – wins a pawn but exposes the queen further.
· 11... Qxg2 – greedy, ignoring White's threat.
· 12... Qg3 – after 12. Bf3, Black walks into a trap.
· 13. fxg3 –
White captures the queen, leaving Black down a queen for a knight and two pawns – a winning material advantage.
After move 13, White's victory is virtually assured despite the later chaotic moves. The final position (24. Qxd3) leaves White with overwhelming material, so Black likely resigned.
Advice for improvement (at ~900 Elo):
· Avoid bringing the queen out too early (moves 4, 6).
· Always check if your queen is attacked after opponent’s move.
· When up material, simplify by trading pieces rather than creating complications.

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