Defence: Move By Move: The Alekhine
High-level chess engines tend to give White a slight, persistent advantage due to the massive space edge. The Alekhine Defence: Move by Move - New In Chess
is a highly provocative chess opening for Black that immediately shatters symmetry by meeting 1. e4 with 1... Nf6 . Named after the fourth World Chess Champion Alexander Alekhine , who famously introduced it in 1921, it is the ultimate "come and get me" hypermodern setup. Instead of fighting for the center with pawns, Black invites White to push their central pawns forward, planning to counterattack and demolish that overextended center later in the game. ♟️ The Core Philosophy: Move by Move
To understand the Alekhine, you have to understand the dialogue happening between both sides on the board. Move 1: 1. e4 Nf6 The Alekhine Defence: Move by Move
You will quickly learn how to use active pieces to compensate for a lack of space. ⚠️ Why you should be careful:
The knight is forced to move again, centralizing on the d5 square. On the surface, Black is violating the opening principle of not moving the same piece twice, but this is exactly what Black wants. Move 3: 3. d4 d6 High-level chess engines tend to give White a
White decides to cash in on the space advantage by exchanging the e5 pawn for Black's d6 pawn. Black can recapture with either pawn ( cxd6 or exd6 ), leading to wildly different pawn structures and strategic battles. 3. The Modern Variation The Moves: 1. e4 Nf6 2. e5 Nd5 3. d4 d6 4. Nf3 The Vibe: Principled and solid.
White accepts the challenge, pushes the pawn to attack the knight, and gains space. ♟️ The Core Philosophy: Move by Move To
If you don't break White's center in time, you will spend the entire game suffocating in a very cramped position.






