@sjcjoosten said in #5:
and in analysis I can try to play more like stockfish or try to play more like the games I won.
If you could simply decide to play like Stockfish, this would make things so much easier. I mean it's not like you sit there and think "This move is the best, but Stockfish would play the other one and win".
Sometimes we have the feeling that objectively some other move might be better than our choice, but what we play gives us reasonably good chances. I think that is ok, as chess is a practical game between humans, but those decisions should not be taken lightly if they come with a potential downside.
For example, if you have a forced way to go to a Bishop+Knight ending, a theoretical win, but you never practiced it, it may be a good choice to keep material on the board instead, even if it might be objectively drawn at that point.
The better you get, the more moves will be approved by stockfish. Playing good moves is the best we can aim for. Learning which moves (or positions) are good is a life long task.
There is one more thing... if you are lost anyway, just following the best engine line is often simply the longest way to sure death. Playing suboptimal moves which create problems and tricks is most likely what you are looking for.
Sometimes you have the option to give your opponent the difficult choice between moves. If this comes at no or little cost, this is what you're looking for. You don't want to degrade your position on every move, but little differences in evaluation like 1.1 vs 1.3... those values usually mean very little.
On the useful indication of "can you still improve": is that a good thing or is it a sign of a bad position since it can be improved? I'm guessing you meant it as a good thing because it means there's a plan?
It is usually a good thing. If you cannot improve your position any longer, you obviously cannot win. If neither side cannot improve, it's a draw.
As a side note, I recently played in an OTB tournament a move that I thought would not be best, but is very reasonable, and comes with a little threat. It worked and won the game on the spot on move ten basically. But it wasn't a cheapo that ruined my position otherwise. Those are the moves I like. :-) SF later said the move was ok and within the top three choices anyway; order depends on the search depth.
One more thing to consider: finding "only moves" is not synonymous with hard to play. Frequently it is much harder for the winning side to find their only winning moves, than to find the (forced) only moves for the defending side.
Man, chess is hard. ;-)
@sjcjoosten said in #5:
> and in analysis I can try to play more like stockfish or try to play more like the games I won.
If you could simply decide to play like Stockfish, this would make things so much easier. I mean it's not like you sit there and think "This move is the best, but Stockfish would play the other one and win".
Sometimes we have the feeling that objectively some other move might be better than our choice, but what we play gives us reasonably good chances. I think that is ok, as chess is a practical game between humans, but those decisions should not be taken lightly if they come with a potential downside.
For example, if you have a forced way to go to a Bishop+Knight ending, a theoretical win, but you never practiced it, it may be a good choice to keep material on the board instead, even if it might be objectively drawn at that point.
The better you get, the more moves will be approved by stockfish. Playing good moves is the best we can aim for. Learning which moves (or positions) are good is a life long task.
There is one more thing... if you are lost anyway, just following the best engine line is often simply the longest way to sure death. Playing suboptimal moves which create problems and tricks is most likely what you are looking for.
Sometimes you have the option to give your opponent the difficult choice between moves. If this comes at no or little cost, this is what you're looking for. You don't want to degrade your position on every move, but little differences in evaluation like 1.1 vs 1.3... those values usually mean very little.
> On the useful indication of "can you still improve": is that a good thing or is it a sign of a bad position since it can be improved? I'm guessing you meant it as a good thing because it means there's a plan?
It is usually a good thing. If you cannot improve your position any longer, you obviously cannot win. If neither side cannot improve, it's a draw.
As a side note, I recently played in an OTB tournament a move that I thought would not be best, but is very reasonable, and comes with a little threat. It worked and won the game on the spot on move ten basically. But it wasn't a cheapo that ruined my position otherwise. Those are the moves I like. :-) SF later said the move was ok and within the top three choices anyway; order depends on the search depth.
One more thing to consider: finding "only moves" is not synonymous with hard to play. Frequently it is much harder for the winning side to find their only winning moves, than to find the (forced) only moves for the defending side.
Man, chess is hard. ;-)