King's Pawn Game Explained

Openingname:King's Pawn Game
Moves:1.e4
Eco:B00–B99, C00–C99
Aka:e4
King's Pawn Opening
Chessgid:21720&move=1.5&moves=e4

The King's Pawn Game is any chess opening starting with the move:

1. e4

It is the most popular opening move in chess,[1] followed by 1.d4, the Queen's Pawn Game.

Principles

White opens with the most popular of the twenty possible opening moves. Since nearly all openings beginning 1.e4 have names of their own, the term King's Pawn Game, unlike Queen's Pawn Game, is rarely used to describe the opening of the game.

Advancing the king's pawn two squares is highly useful because it occupies a square, attacks the center square d5, and allows the of White's and queen. Chess grandmaster Bobby Fischer said that the King's Pawn Game is "Best by test",[2] and proclaimed that "With 1.e4! I win."[3]

Opening categorization and continuations

King's Pawn Games are further classified by whether Black responds with 1...e5 or not. Openings beginning with 1.e4 e5 are called Double King's Pawn Games, Double King's Pawn Openings, Symmetrical King's Pawn Games, or Open Games  - these terms are equivalent. Openings where Black responds to 1.e4 with a move other than 1...e5 are called Asymmetrical King's Pawn Games or Semi-Open Games.

The Encyclopedia of Chess Openings (ECO) classifies all King's Pawn Games into volumes B or C: volume C if the game starts with 1.e4 e6 (the French Defence) or 1.e4 e5; volume B if Black answers 1.e4 with any other move. The rare instances where the opening does not fall into a more specific category than King's Pawn Game are included in codes B00 (includes the Nimzowitsch Defence and unusual moves after 1.e4), C20 (includes Alapin's Opening and unusual moves after 1.e4 e5), C40 (includes the Latvian Gambit and unusual moves after 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3), and C50 (includes the Hungarian Defence, the Giuoco Pianissimo, and unusual moves after 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4).

The Black responses which are given one or more chapters in the ECO are given below, ranked in order of popularity according to ChessBase.

Popular continuations

Uncommon continuations

Apart from these eight responses, all other replies from Black are covered together in ECO chapter B00. A few of these are not entirely obscure, and have been analyzed in detail.

Rare continuations

The remaining replies to 1.e4 are very rare, and have not received significant and serious attention by masters. MCO does not cover them, considering them so bad as not to merit discussion.[6] These openings sometimes lead to wild and exciting games, and are occasionally employed by weaker players to get better trained opponents "out-of-". Some have exotic names. Such openings are listed below along with instances where they have been used by strong players.

See also

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Book: Keene . Raymond . Levy . David . 1993 . How to Play the Opening in Chess . 978-0805029376.
  2. Book: Fischer, Bobby . Bobby Fischer . 1969 . My 60 Memorable Games . registration . 45. Fischer–Bisguier, New York State Open 1963 . . 978-0-671-21483-8 . 280.
  3. Book: Seirawan, Yasser . 2003 . Winning Chess Brilliancies . Microsoft Press . 978-1857443479 .
  4. Web site: Karpov vs. Miles, European Team Championship, Skara 1980 . Chessgames.com.
  5. [Nick de Firmian]
  6. "Other defenses, such as 1...h5, are not considered as they are simply too bad and need no discussion." Modern Chess Openings, 15th edition, p. 384.
  7. Web site: Wall . Bill . April 30, 2006 . Unorthodox Openings . https://web.archive.org/web/20090803195057/http://geocities.com/SiliconValley/Lab/7378/unortho.htm . 2009-08-03 . 2009-04-24.
  8. Philip W. Sergeant, Morphy's Games of Chess, Dover Publications, 1957, pp. 238–40.
  9. Web site: Paul Morphy vs. Thomas Wilson Barnes, casual game (1858), London . Chessgames.com.