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Courses (216)

1.Nf3 d5 2.g3 System - Flexible Setup for White - Part 2 

In the landscape of modern opening theory, the Fianchetto Reti has emerged as a flexible weapon that allows White to reach Grünfeld-type positions with an extra tempo. While Part 1 established the foundational understanding of this setup, Part 2—authored by GM Andrea Stella and GM Pier Luigi Basso with assistance from GM Alexey Dreev—tackles Black's most challenging response: the aggressive ...c5 combined with ...Nc6, creating rich tactical complexities from the opening moves.

Sequence:  KIA According to Stella  »

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4h and 26min PGN Download Memory Booster Interactive Tests Video Content

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French Tarrasch for Black 

The Tarrasch Variation (3.Nd2) is chosen by players who value solidity over complications, aiming to limit Black's active possibilities while maintaining a safe edge. Gumularz and Basso systematically dismantle this comfort zone.
Their repertoire is built on 3...c5—Black's most principled response—followed by the healthy recapture 4...Qxd5, avoiding structural concessions. Unlike creative but offbeat approaches such as Jobava's 3...h6, this course prioritizes classical logic and practical reliability.

Sequence:  French Defense According to Gumularz  »

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French Advance for Black 

The 5...Bd7 system in the French Advance has long operated in the shadow of the sharper 5...Qb6, despite offering Black a stable strategic position. While modern theory gravitates toward immediate confrontation, Polish Grandmaster Szymon Gumularz recognized that White's improved understanding of the 6.a3 mainline warranted another approach—one that avoids the forcing lines after 5...Qb6 6.a3 without sacrificing Black's counterplay.
Working with GM Pier Luigi Basso, Gumularz demonstrates that the classical 5...Bd7 6.Be2 Nge7 system isn't outdated at all; it's simply been waiting for the right moment to return. This course presents a complete repertoire built on the concept that strategic solidity, when combined with concrete preparation, creates lasting practical value.

Sequence:  French Defense According to Gumularz  »

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2h and 19min PGN Download Memory Booster Interactive Tests Video Content

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Understand the French Defense: Petrosian's Legacy 

For over a century, the French Defense has captivated chess players worldwide. Yet understanding it—truly understanding it—requires more than memorizing engine evaluations. GM Pier Luigi Basso's Understand the French series takes a different approach: studying the games of history's greatest French specialists to reveal the strategic ideas, plans, and philosophy behind their play.

Sequence:  1.e4 Structures  »

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3h and 10min PGN Download Interactive Tests Video Content

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Dreev Deep Caro-Kann - Classical Line with 4...Nf6 

For decades, the Classical Caro-Kann with 4...Nf6 has carried a reputation problem. After 5.Nxf6+ exf6, Black's doubled f-pawns look like a permanent structural concession—the kind of damage that gives White a safe and comfortable game. Many strong players avoid this line for exactly that reason.
But Alexey Dreev stopped avoiding it. He started studying it. What he discovered was a system whose structural "weakness" is actually a source of enormous dynamic potential—a fighting weapon that refuses to play by the rules White expects.

Sequence:  Caro-Kann According to Dreev  »

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Queen's Gambit Declined with ...Be7 for Black: The Complete System versus Bf4 and Bg5 

The course centers on 1.d4 d5 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 Nf6 4.Nc3 Be7, targeting White's two most popular fifth move options—5.Bf4 and 5.Bg5. Against the fashionable 5.Bf4, the repertoire employs 6...Nbd7, steering play toward positions where White's edge is more theoretical than practical. Against the statistical mainline 5.Bg5, the recommendation is the sharp 5...dxc4 6.e4 b5, reaching a position with only five games in the database—a dramatic escape from mainstream theory that still maintains full soundness.

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2h and 52min PGN Download Memory Booster Interactive Tests Computer Practice Video Content

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1.e4 for White: Crush the Pirc and Modern Defense  Platinum

The Pirc and Modern Defense share a strategic foundation that has frustrated 1.e4 players for decades: the fianchettoed bishop on g7. This piece anchors Black's counterplay, controls key central squares, and creates resilient defensive structures that refuse easy refutation. Unlike symmetrical systems or forced theoretical duels, these openings invite complexity and practical chaos—precisely where ambitious players thrive.

GM Pier Luigi Basso and GM Jose Martinez Alcantara address this challenge with a unified repertoire built on precision, clarity, and long-term understanding. Their approach rejects speculative aggression in favor of structural control and concrete preparation. The system is anchored by Be3 followed by Qd2, establishing a clear plan: exchange the g7-bishop with Bh6, neutralize Black's counterplay, and convert White's space advantage into a lasting initiative.

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3h and 10min PGN Download Memory Booster Interactive Tests Computer Practice Video Content

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Carlsbad Structure 3…Be7: Key Ideas and Repertoire for Black  Premium

There is a small paradox at the heart of the Queen's Gambit Declined. For decades, Black's automatic response — 3…Nf6 — has shaped an enormous body of theory, one that White players study intensively. The bishop on g5 became a weapon, a defining feature of countless grandmaster battles. Yet there is a quieter move — 3…Be7 — that sidesteps all of that. It doesn't invite the pin. It doesn't offer the standard trade-offs. It shifts the entire character of the game, and, as GM Alexey Dreev notes in the course introduction, most White players give it little or no attention at all.

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3h and 43min PGN Download Memory Booster Interactive Tests Computer Practice Video Content

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1.d4 d5 2.Nf3 Bf5 - Practical Setup for Black 

Every d5-player knows the feeling. You prepare meticulously against 1.d4 and 2.c4, learn the theory, understand the structures — and then White plays 2.Nf3, 2.Bf4, 2.Nc3, or simply develops without committing to c4. Suddenly, the preparation does not apply. You are still on move two, and already navigating unfamiliar territory across several different systems.

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2h and 9min PGN Download Memory Booster Interactive Tests

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How Nimzo-Indian Players Can Meet 1.c4 

There is a long-standing paradox in repertoire building: the player who opens with 1.c4 is often trying to sidestep theory, yet the resulting positions can be just as complex and principled as what they hoped to avoid. GMs Pier Luigi Basso and Szymon Gumularz have built their new course around exactly this insight — rather than retreating into solid passivity, they arm Black with active, space-grabbing responses at every turn, turning the English into a battlefield of Black's choosing.

Sequence:  Modern Nimzo-Indian Repertoire  »

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3h and 47min PGN Download Memory Booster Interactive Tests Video Content

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