How to play chess
How to play chess isn’t just about memorizing legal moves. It’s about understanding what you want to do in each phase of the game, and in what order it makes sense to learn it. In this guide I’ll walk you through the five steps I recommend to any beginner. Let’s go.
Step 1: get your bearings on the board
Before thinking about tactics or openings, you need to feel comfortable with the basics. Do you know where each piece goes at the start? Can you recognize the squares by name? If not yet, start here:
- The board — files, ranks and colors
- Setting up the pieces
- How the pieces move — the core of everything
- Algebraic notation
Once you master this, you’ll be able to read any written game. It’s easier than it looks.
Step 2: master the essential rules
The rules of chess include some special moves that surprise beginners. Don’t skip them: they shape many practical positions, and if you don’t know them, you’ll end up making illegal moves.
- Check — what it is and how to respond
- Checkmate — the final goal of every game
- Castling — how to keep your king safe
- Pawn promotion — turn a pawn into a queen
- En passant capture
- Illegal moves
Learn these concepts in order. Each one opens up a new layer of understanding.
Step 3: recognize simple threats
Once you know how to move the pieces, it’s time to learn what decides games at beginner and intermediate level. 80% of games between beginners are won by whoever spots a threat the other one misses.
Here are the most important patterns:
- Tactics — the art of winning material or delivering mate in a few strikes
- Fork (double attack)
- Pin
- Discovered attack
Can you imagine winning a piece of material just by spotting a fork in time? That’s exactly what you’ll achieve once you train these ideas.
Step 4: play with an idea
You don’t need to study hundreds of lines to start playing better. What matters is stringing together four principles from the very first move:
- development — bring your pieces out as soon as possible
- king safety — keep it safe by castling
- control of the center — occupy e4, d4, e5, d5
- piece coordination — make them work together, not separately
We cover that block thoroughly starting from openings and the middlegame. If you want a concrete starting point, the free course guides you step by step through this process.
Step 5: close out games well
Many beginner players reach a level endgame and don’t know how to convert an advantage. Or worse: they have the advantage and squander it. That’s what the endgame block is for: you’ll learn to win with a king and a rook, to use passed pawns, and to avoid mistakes as the board empties out.
A minimal routine that works
With 20 minutes a day you’ll make steady progress. Here’s how I’d split that time:
- 10 minutes of puzzles — trains your eye for tactics
- 1 quick or blitz game — apply what you’ve learned; you can also play against the computer if you’d rather practice without pressure
- 5 minutes reviewing with the PGN and FEN viewer — find the exact moment the game went wrong
If you want the full study roadmap, continue with Learn chess: training path.
Preguntas frecuentes
What does someone need to know to start playing chess?
It's enough to understand the board, the starting setup, how the pieces move and the special rules.
How long does it take a beginner to learn to play?
The rules are learned quickly; what takes more time is recognizing patterns and making decisions calmly.
What's the next step after learning the rules?
Playing short games, doing simple tactics puzzles, and reviewing your most repeated mistakes.