Learn chess by practice, not by rote.
You know rote-learning: cramming theory by heart while your rating stays flat. Here, every idea is learned through practice — that's why it finally sticks.
Three habits, every single lesson
Patterns you can recognise at a glance, technique you can reproduce under pressure, and the discipline to not blunder the win away.
Recognise the pattern
Each idea starts from the bare mating picture — only the pieces that matter — so the shape lodges in memory before any moves.
Force it yourself
Then you drive the position home on a live board. Technique sticks when your own hand makes the moves, not when you read them.
Dodge the trap
Every winning method has a way to spoil it — stalemate, a wrong square. You learn the trap by name so it never catches you.
This isn't just a hunch. Repeating a lesson right after you've mastered it — cramming — boosts your score in the short term, but the benefit "diminishes sharply over time": it's all but gone four weeks later. What lasts is practice picked up again and spaced out. Rohrer & Pashler (2007), Current Directions in Psychological Science, 16(4), 183–186 ↗
Endgame Fundamentals
The foundations first. Chapter 1 is live now — more chapters land as the beta grows.
Elementary Checkmates Live
The mates every player should deliver in their sleep — and stalemate, the trap that turns a won game into a draw.
King & Pawn Endings Coming soon
Opposition, the square of the pawn, key squares — the engine room of every endgame you will ever play.
Rook Endings Coming soon
The Lucena, the Philidor, the cut-off rook. The most common endgame on the board, finally demystified.
Ready to start?
Chapter 1 takes about ninety minutes, costs nothing during the beta, and you can pick it up where you left off.
Open Elementary Checkmates →