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Bogo-Indian Defense (1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 Bb4+)

Looking for a defense against 1.d4 that’s rock solid and easy to understand? The Bogo-Indian Defense is exactly that: the calm cousin of the Nimzo-Indian.

The main idea

After 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3, Black gives check with 3…Bb4+. That check forces White to commit the dark-squared bishop right away, usually with Bd2.

  • It’s the natural response when White avoids the Nimzo-Indian by playing Nf3.
  • Aims for solidity and simplification: no adventures.
  • Fits perfectly into a positional repertoire.

The first moves

PPractice: Bogo-Indian Defense

You play Black. After developing, you give the thematic check Bb4+, and when White blocks with Bd2 you reposition with Qe7, keeping pressure and harmony.

Who is it for?

For positional, patient players. If you like this family, also explore the Nimzo-Indian Defense and the Queen’s Indian Defense.


Related openings: Semi-closed openings · Nimzo-Indian Defense · Queen’s Indian Defense · All openings

Analiza partidas de esta apertura

Pega cualquier PGN para reproducir y estudiar partidas paso a paso. Encuentralas en Lichess o Chess.com.

Preguntas frecuentes

What is the Bogo-Indian Defense?

It's the reply 3...Bb4+ after 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3. The check forces White to block with a piece (Bd2 or Nbd2). It's a solid Indian defense, related to the Nimzo-Indian, seeking solidity and simplification.

Bogo-Indian or Nimzo-Indian?

If White plays 3.Nc3, Black can pin with 3...Bb4 (Nimzo-Indian). If White chooses 3.Nf3, that knight isn't on c3 anymore, so the check 3...Bb4+ leads to the Bogo-Indian. They're cousins sharing the same philosophy of pressure on the light squares.

Who is the Bogo-Indian for?

For positional players who want a reliable defense against 1.d4 without memorizing long tactical lines. It's one of the safest openings in the Indian repertoire.