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Queen's Gambit Accepted report from your own games

Queen's Gambit Accepted report from your own games

Take the pawn and fight back. See if your active play compensates.

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Queen's Gambit Accepted Report

36 GAMESSample Data
Win Rate
53%

Performance vs Other Openings

Queen's Gambit Accepted53% Win
Other Openings47% Win

Key Insights

Pawn Handling
black
High Impact

Attempts to Hold the Extra c4 Pawn Backfire 70% of the Time

What this means
In 14 of 36 QGA games, you tried to hold the extra pawn on c4 with ...b5. This leads to a weakened queenside in 10 of those games: White targets the b5 pawn with a4, and your pawn structure collapses. Your win rate when holding the pawn is only 21%, compared to 67% when you return it for development and activity.
How to improve
In the QGA, do not try to hold the c4 pawn permanently — this is a common amateur mistake. Instead, use the pawn as a tempo-gainer: after ...dxc4, develop with ...Nf6, ...e6, ...Be7, and let White recapture on c4. If you play ...b5 to hold the pawn, be aware that a4 will come and you need ...c6 and ...Bb7 to justify the structure. The modern approach is to play ...a6 and ...b5 only after full development, using the queenside expansion for counterplay rather than pawn-hoarding.
#extra-pawn#pawn-holding#development-priority
Queenside Counterplay
black

The ...a6/...b5 Expansion Creates Strong Counterplay When Timed Right

What this means
In 22 of 36 games, you play ...a6 and ...b5 as part of your QGA setup. When timed correctly (after ...Nf6, ...e6, and ...Be7 or ...Bb4+), this expansion gives you a strong queenside initiative — your win rate is 68% in these cases. However, in 7 games you play ...a6/...b5 too early (before developing), and your win rate drops to 29% as White exploits the tempo loss.
How to improve
The ...a6/...b5 plan is excellent but requires proper timing. The correct sequence: (1) Develop knights first — ...Nf6 is almost always move 2, (2) Play ...e6 to open the diagonal for your dark-squared bishop, (3) Develop the bishop — ...Be7 or ...Bb4+ depending on White's setup, (4) Only then play ...a6 and ...b5 to expand. After ...b5, your bishop goes to b7, targeting the center. This plan works especially well in the Classical Main Line where White plays e3, as the b7 bishop attacks e4 directly.
#a6-b5#queenside-expansion#development-order
Center Strategy
black
High Impact

Central Control Is Ceded Too Easily After ...dxc4

What this means
After 1.d4 d5 2.c4 dxc4, you surrender the d5 square and White often establishes a strong e4-d4 center by move 8 in 20 of 36 games. You fail to challenge this center with ...c5 or ...e5 in 13 of those games, and White's space advantage becomes overwhelming. Your win rate when you challenge the center by move 10 is 61%, but only 30% when you allow White to keep e4 and d4 unchallenged.
How to improve
After taking on c4, you must fight for the center with your pieces and pawn breaks. The key move is ...c5, challenging d4 directly — this should be your primary strategic goal in most QGA lines. Alternatively, ...e5 can work after proper preparation. Support your central fight with ...Nc6, ...Bb4+, or ...Bb7 to put pressure on e4 and d4. Never allow White a free e4 + d4 center — the QGA is about giving up the d5 pawn temporarily to generate counterplay, not about passively accepting a space disadvantage.
#central-control#c5-break#pawn-center

Top Variations

1
Classical Main Line
16 games
2
Janowski-Larsen
11 games
3
Smyslov Variation
9 games

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What we analyze in your Queen's Gambit Accepted games

Your development speed after accepting

Your central control (especially e4)

Your ability to return the pawn at the right time

Your handling of isolated queen's pawn positions

Your piece activity vs material balance

Key Positions to Know

Critical concepts every Queen's Gambit Accepted player should understand

Accepting the Gambit

With 2...dxc4, Black grabs the c4 pawn, conceding the center temporarily. Black doesn't try to hold the pawn — instead, the idea is to develop freely while White spends time recapturing. Black gains a flexible position with multiple pawn break options.

The ...c5 Central Break

Black's key strategic move is ...c5, challenging White's d4 pawn and creating counter-tension in the center. After ...a6 and ...b5, Black can develop the bishop to b7 and fight for the long diagonal while maintaining active piece play.

Dynamic Piece Activity

The QGA leads to open, dynamic positions where pieces are more important than pawn structure. Both sides develop quickly, and tactical opportunities arise naturally. Black's position is solid and flexible, making the QGA a reliable practical choice at all levels.

Opening Statistics

Original research from 4,436 real amateur games — data you won't find anywhere else.

Avg. Game Length
64.8moves1.6
Underdog Wins
41.3%2.0%
Quick Finishes
5.9% avg
Endgame Reach
77.1%1.2%
White's Edge
+8.4%4.7%
Favors BlackEqualFavors White

At 1200-1400

📊Games last 65 moves on average — right around average for this bracket.

📊The lower-rated player wins 41.3% of games — about average for this bracket.

📊5.9% of games end before move 20 — most games get into the middlegame.

📊77.1% of games reach the endgame (40+ moves) — about typical for this bracket.

📊White's edge is +8.4% — White has a clear advantage at this level.

How This Opening Changes as You Improve

RatingGamesWhite's EdgeAvg. Game LengthUnderdog WinsQuick FinishesEndgame Reach
800-1000787
+14.4%56 /3 /41
60+137.9%9.7%69.1%
1000-1200985
+14.1%55 /3 /41
6438.7%6.0%74.1%
1200-1400995
+8.4%53 /3 /44
65-241.3%5.9%77.1%
1400-1600949
+15.7%56 /4 /40
72+339.0%4.0%81.5%
1600-1800720
+15.4%56 /3 /41
70-240.3%3.8%82.8%

Based on 4,436 games · Updated

Common Queen's Gambit Accepted patterns we detect

We automatically check if you fall for these specific traps.

About the Queen's Gambit Accepted

The Queen's Gambit Accepted (1.d4 d5 2.c4 dxc4) is an active defense where Black accepts the gambit pawn and aims for quick development and central control.

We analyze your development efficiency, central control, and piece activity. We identify where greed for material leads to problems.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Queen's Gambit Accepted analysis

The Queen's Gambit Accepted arises after 1.d4 d5 2.c4 dxc4, where Black takes the offered c-pawn rather than declining it. Unlike the Queen's Gambit Declined, Black accepts the material and then tries to hold it or use the tempo to develop actively. White's compensation is a strong center — after 3.Nf3 Nf6 4.e3 e6 5.Bxc4, White has the bishop pair and central control. Black typically cannot hold the c4 pawn long-term without compromising development.
After 2...dxc4, Black cannot realistically hold the extra pawn — White will regain it with Bxc4. Instead, Black's plan is to use the pawn capture to free the queenside and develop actively. The typical follow-up is 3.Nf3 Nf6 4.e3 e6 5.Bxc4 c5, immediately striking White's d4 center. Black aims for equality through active piece play: ...Nc6 or ...a6-b5 to probe the c4 bishop, and eventual ...Bd6 or ...Be7 with O-O. The QGA leads to open, dynamic positions rather than the solid structures of the QGD.
After 2...dxc4 3.Nf3, the move 3...a6 prepares ...b5 to hold the c4 pawn with queenside expansion. After 4.e3 e6 5.Bxc4 b5 6.Bd3, Black has actually held the extra pawn temporarily but at the cost of queenside pawn advances that weaken the a6 and b5 squares. This approach creates the most unbalanced QGA positions — White focuses on central play while Black has queenside tension. Alexander Alekhine and Vasily Smyslov used this approach to good effect in World Championship-level play.
After 2...dxc4 3.Nf3 Nf6 4.e3 e6 5.Bxc4 c5 6.O-O a6, if Black plays 7...b5?? without ensuring the bishop is safe after 8.Bd3 Bb7 9.a4!, White attacks the b5 pawn. If Black plays 9...b4??, White pounces with 10.Nbd2 and the b4-pawn is weak with all pieces active. Black must play 9...bxa4 10.Rxa4, giving up the plan of holding b5 while White gains a rook on the a-file. The lesson: in the QGA, timing the ...b5 and ...b4 advances requires precise coordination with piece development.

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