Thanks
@J_SEDA_conant !
@Haymarket said in #5:
> Quick tip: make safe, meaningless moves fast to increase your time. Of course you must be careful not to draw with threefold (or 50 moves rule). Okay thanks!
@ShiningDrongo said in #6:
> I'm the "thinker" type myself, I know the pain. Do you have a consistent opening repertoire already? That's one way to save time, when your opponent has to think and you don't.
>
> As for "seeing tactics fast", you just have to gradually improve as you play and do the usual chess stuff (puzzles etc.) No magic tricks there.
>
> Instead, maybe think about your own time management, how exactly do you get into time trouble. Personally, I keep reminding myself to "just make the damn moves" and believe it or not, it helps. If I make the first 20 moves in 10 minutes in a 30+0 game, I won't get into time trouble. If I make only ten, I most certainly will.
I do have a repertoire, Queens gambit as white and French as black.
Normally, I look at an interesting variation, and a normal variation when it seems that there would be some advantage if you play the interesting variation. Welp, I'll try to keep reminding myself to "play the damn moves too" XD
@Akbar2thegreat said in #7:
>
@Soccergirl_08> Don't think during opening. Plan in middlegame what to do by using time. Looking at endgame if it's easy then simply do exchage or if not then think for sometime to proceed.
> And if you are playing attackingly make sure to calculate everything because it wrongly calculated it can backfire. And if you are playing quite defensively don't spend more than 5 minutes on a move in a 25+0 game.
Normally, I think a lot in middlegame, and then get an awesome endgame position but very less time (less than 1 min but up 3 pawns with a bishop and knight on board or so)
@ryan121 said in #8:
> Practice online games with 10 minutes time control. If you get used to this time control, you won't be in time trouble in 15 + 3 otb game. You can also create a game with 12 minutes if 10 minutes is too fast.
10 min with or without increment?
@Frogster64 said in #9:
> You do have lichess, though. I'd recommend more practice online with similar time controls. OTB is not that different from online chess. Try to be aware of where you waste the most time. In rapid and blitz you often just have to be decisive and make a move. No point in finding all the best moves, then losing on time.
Okay thanks, and yes I learnt that there's no point in finding all the best moves and then losing on time D: