thank you, i think it ll be very usefull for all of us, i'll follow you
thank you, i think it ll be very usefull for all of us, i'll follow you
thank you, i think it ll be very usefull for all of us, i'll follow you
Thank you for this. My habit has been to plug my games into the analysis and take notes on my worst blunders as so identified, but I'm going to try to take this advice, of studying my games first without such support, to identify when I felt myself going off the rails or getting out of my depth. I guess there's no point in learning a computer's opinion of where my biggest mistake was, if by the time I'd made it, I'd already gotten into a position that my brain couldn't handle.
I really like the way you compared reviewing chess games to learning from mistakes — it actually reminds me of gambling in a way, where you also need discipline and reflection to really improve. I’ve been reading about different sites and came across https://nz-casinoonline.nz/ which is a New Zealand website, and the idea of analyzing wins and losses there works just like in chess: sometimes you learn more from the games you don’t win than from the ones you do.