Every Move is a TRAP in this Opening After 1.e4 | Danish Gambit

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♛ Find the variations/traps shown in the video in this blog-post –

🔹 Aggressive Chess Opening, Goring Gambit for White After 1.e4 [TRAPS Included] –

In this video lesson, GM Igor Smirnov shares with a powerful and aggressive chess opening for White after 1.e4. It is the Danish Gambit which happens after the following moves: 1.e4 e5 2.d4 exd4 3.c3.

It is a super-aggressive opening where White plays several god-level moves in a row. Almost all the most common moves played by Black lead to deadly traps that gives a huge advantage for White or wins the game straightaway.

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► Chapters

00:00 Powerful Chess Opening for White After 1.e4
00:23 Danish Gambit Chess Opening
01:03 Trap-1: If Black plays 5…Nf6
02:25 Trap-2: 5…Bb4+ mainline
03:55 God-level moves, every move
06:35 e2-pawn promotes on b8!
07:15 Computer suggests a CRAZY line
08:39 Trap-3: 5…d6 to stop e5
09:27 Puzzle of the day
10:40 Trap-4: If Black plays 5…Qg5
12:11 Trap-5: 5…Nc6 (for advanced players)
15:01 Trap-6: 5…d5 (for advanced players)
16:52 Can Black avoid the Danish Gambit?

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#GMSmirnov #ChessGambit #ChessTraps #OpeningTraps #ChessGambits #DanishGambit

30 Comments

  1. 1:26 black Queen goes to E7. The white pawn can not capture knight as it is pinned to the king.

  2. Sir at 9:41 there wasn't any fried liver attack because the g5 square was protected by the queen

  3. ❤total great idea

  4. can someone please give me the moves order please

  5. what if black plays Q f8 instead of e8? Doesn’t that foil all the plans?

  6. basicly the puzzle is like the legals mate

  7. Play c8 make it a Queen then Qg7 and that is a mate

  8. if e4 e5 d4 exd4 c3 dxc3 Bc4 cxb2 Bxb2 Bb4+ Kf1 is best than Nf6 e5 there is d5!

  9. "That's how you beat nerds". Brilliant.

  10. By YouSum Live

    00:00:00 Danish Gambit: A powerful opening strategy.
    00:00:40 Sacrifice pawns for monster bishops.
    00:01:01 Utilize queen's mobility for pressure.
    00:01:43 Exploit opponent's undeveloped pieces strategically.
    00:01:45 Execute common tactics for success.
    00:02:01 Disrupt opponent's castling with tactical sacrifices.
    00:02:04 Employ in-between moves for tactical advantage.
    00:02:26 Utilize discovered checks to maintain pressure.
    00:02:43 Create unexpected threats with pawn promotions.
    00:03:12 Control key diagonals for positional dominance.
    00:03:33 Counter opponent's defensive attempts with aggression.
    00:04:01 Exploit opponent's positional weaknesses for victory.
    00:04:18 Maintain pressure to prevent opponent's counterplay.
    00:04:41 Neutralize opponent's counterattacks with precise moves.
    00:05:23 Counter advanced opponents with strategic knight maneuvers.
    00:05:49 Exploit opponent's blunders for material advantage.
    00:06:01 Defend against opponent's attempts to equalize.
    00:06:16 Utilize tactical sacrifices to gain material advantage.
    00:17:01 Dealing with threats and strategic pawn exchanges.
    00:17:17 Transitioning to a normal game of chess post-exchange.
    00:17:31 Inviting opponent to capture on B2 with Bishop C4.
    00:17:38 Potential transpositions and variations in the game.
    00:17:50 Development of the Goring Gambit as an alternative.
    00:18:01 Further resources available on the Goring Gambit.

    By YouSum Live

  11. Cool video, bur there is a moment when black can capture our pawn instead of trading knights and position is pretty balanced

  12. IN highschool chess team – i played Danish Gambit and won. Was so proud of myself. All i had was Alexander Alekhine best games book from my father and my DOS computer chess program to practice with.

  13. 99% of people will never accept the second pawn.

  14. What's the 4:24 move? I mean, is it real? Never had that one

  15. Black Queen to d6 stopped this in it's tracks

  16. 6:33 i don't know why black cant just play Bd7 to pin the queen to the king and then take it

  17. Okay, and what about 1. e4 e5 2. d4 d6? What about 1. e4 e5 2. d4 Ng6?

  18. It. Can still do the single square moves so that is not entirely true

  19. Well I played my first game with this and it worked out exactly as shown lol

  20. The Nf6 line also goes like this Nf6 e5 B4+ and now black is wining

  21. I've been playing the start of the Danish Gambit for years, but being content to win after the first pawn sacrifice with Nxc3 and have the initiative. Developing the two bishops in exchange for another pawn is a revelation. Whee! SO: does it work the same with the Smith-Morra against the Sicilian? Same underlying idea.

  22. At 4:42 what if the knight grabs the pawn on d6 instead?

  23. This gambit is abusive 😂

  24. What If they don't take the pawn in the beginning and instead develop f6 knight?

  25. Great opening to practice my tactics in actual games!

  26. What about if he goes pawn d6 queen d7. What traps are there? Just seems like black is way ahead?

  27. 1:26 "where can the knight go?"
    G4 is a fine place. The queen controls the square but it's a trap. If queen takes on g4 then black can push d5 forking the queen and the bishop.
    You have to move your queen and he takes bishop

  28. Already trading on your broker’s site, really satisfied with the results.🦺

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