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Is the Pirc Defense any good?

It's great, especially if you are a KID player.
Although I'd recommend looking into a few lines against the early Be3 Qe2 O-O-O stuff that white can throw at you. You don't want to be unprepared against it
At the club level it's fine, but at the grandmaster level the Modern Defense appears to be preferred over it though even then is only employed as a surprise weapon. Unless you're a grandmaster looking to play cutting-edge theory, I think the Pirc is perfectly playable as long as it suits your style.
@Mahith1708 It doesn't answer all questions xD But yeah I know that game too of course.

I was thinking about playing it as black against d4. I know how to attack it as white too, but I wondered if it could suit me as a defense against d4 players who usually do not attack that much.
@WinOr10PushUps the game depends upon the endgame so you should try to focus on endgames and any opening you play you have to face the endgame, if you are comfortable with pirc defense you can play it . People like to play different openings in which they are comfortable
The Pirc setup against d4 is not actually a Pirc.

It's a King's Indian Defense which for the longest time was a favourite of aggressive players like Fischer, Kasparov, and Judit Polgar. Kasparov has a very low opinion of the Pirc, but until his match against Kramnik included the KID in his repertoire. Today Nakamura will use it occasionally though top level players don't generally like it since it is very sharp and requires a lot of study to play well. There are many possible variations (Main Line, Samisch, Bayonet Attack, Fianchetto Variation, Seirawan Variation, Petrosian Variation, Smyslov Variation, Trompowsky Attack, London System, etc...) and if you make a mistake you can get a losing position out of the opening.

In short, the King's Indian Defense is very good. It used to be seen as the "Queen's Pawn Sicilian", but you have to know what you're doing. Don't study Pirc theory except for maybe the Austrian Attack and other lines that can potentially transpose.

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