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Scotch Game report from your own games

Scotch Game report from your own games

Open the center early and fight. See how well your Scotch tactics hold up in real games.

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Sample Report

Scotch Game Report

28 GAMESSample Data
Win Rate
54%

Performance vs Other Openings

Scotch Game54% Win
Other Openings48% Win

Key Insights

Your piece activity drops in the 5 moves following the central exchange
white
High Impact

Underusing Open Lines After d4 Exchange

What this means
In 71% of your Scotch games as White, after the d4xc3 exchange you leave your bishops undeveloped for 3+ moves. Your average centipawn loss in moves 6-10 is 38 cp, compared to 19 cp in your other 1.e4 openings. Games like #187 and #204 show a pattern of slow development letting Black equalize comfortably.
How to improve
After 4.Nxd4, prioritize rapid piece deployment. Develop Bc4 or Bb5 immediately and consider Nf5 ideas to exploit the open center before Black consolidates. Aim to castle by move 7 and seize initiative on the e-file.
#tactics#development#piece-activity
Your gambit line outperforms your other Scotch variations significantly
white

Strong Scotch Gambit Results

What this means
Your Scotch Gambit (4.Bc4) win rate of 67% across 12 games is well above your overall opening average of 48%. You convert tactical advantages within 30 moves in 75% of your gambit wins. This suggests your tactical calculation in sharp open positions is a genuine strength.
How to improve
Continue favoring the Scotch Gambit as your main weapon. Study the critical line 4.Bc4 Nf6 5.e5 d5 6.Bb5 to broaden your repertoire in the sharpest continuations. Consider preparing responses to 4...Bc5 and 4...Nf6 sidelines.
#gambit#strengths#repertoire
Favorable middlegames are slipping away in the transition to endgames
High Impact

Endgame Conversion Problems in the Schmidt

What this means
In the Schmidt Variation, you had a winning or clearly better position entering the endgame in 4 out of 6 games but only converted 2 of them. Your accuracy drops by 14% once queens come off the board. In game #221, you held a +2.1 advantage at move 25 but drew after inaccurate rook placement on move 31.
How to improve
When transitioning from middlegame to endgame in the Schmidt, focus on king centralization and creating passed pawns on the queenside. Practice rook endgames with an extra pawn — your technique in these positions needs sharpening. Avoid trading into pure pawn endgames unless you have a clear structural advantage.
#endgame#conversion#technique

Top Variations

1
Scotch Gambit
12 games
2
Classical Variation
10 games
3
Schmidt Variation
6 games

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What we analyze in your Scotch games

Your handling of the open center and piece activity

Your success in Scotch Gambit sacrifices

Your endgame technique in simplified Scotch positions

Your tactical awareness in sharp lines

Your development efficiency in the opening phase

Your conversion rate when entering favorable endgames

Key Positions to Know

Critical concepts every Scotch Game player should understand

Immediate Central Control

With 3.d4, White opens the center right away, unlike the Italian or Ruy Lopez. After ...exd4 4.Nxd4, White has a powerful centralized knight and open lines. This direct approach avoids long theoretical lines.

Rapid Piece Development

The Scotch rewards quick development. With the center already open, piece activity matters more than pawn structure. White should develop aggressively — Bc4, O-O, Re1 — to exploit the open lines before Black consolidates.

Tactical Complications

Open positions mean tactics. In the Scotch, both sides must constantly watch for knight forks, discovered attacks, and pins. The position is concrete — one mistake can be immediately punished. Calculation beats memorization here.

Opening Statistics

Original research from 11,172 real amateur games — data you won't find anywhere else.

Avg. Game Length
awaiting data
Underdog Wins
awaiting data
Quick Finishes
awaiting data
Endgame Reach
awaiting data
White's Edge
+6.9%
Favors BlackEqualFavors White

At 1200-1400

📊White's edge is +6.9% — White has a clear advantage at this level.

How This Opening Changes as You Improve

RatingGamesWhite's Edge
800-10001,771
+9.8%53 /0 /43
1000-12002,645
+9.5%53 /0 /43
1200-14002,452
+6.9%52 /0 /45
1400-16002,431
+10.9%54 /0 /43
1600-18001,873
+11.9%54 /0 /42

Based on 11,172 games · Updated March 2026

Common Scotch patterns we detect

We automatically check if you fall for these specific traps.

About the Scotch Game

The Scotch Game (1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. d4) opens the center immediately, leading to active piece play and early tactical skirmishes. A favorite of Kasparov and Carlsen.

We track your tactical accuracy in the open positions, piece development efficiency, and endgame conversion rates. We identify where you miss tactical opportunities.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Scotch Game analysis

The Scotch Game begins with 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. d4 — White immediately challenges the centre with d4 rather than building up slowly as in the Ruy Lopez or Italian. After 3...exd4 4. Nxd4, the centre is opened and both sides must develop quickly. The Scotch creates immediate tactical imbalances, making it popular with players who want an early fight without deep theoretical preparation.
The Mieses Variation is the modern main line, popularised by Kasparov. After 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. d4 exd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nxc6 bxc6 6. e5 Qe7 7. Qe2 Nd5 8. c4, White creates structural imbalances: Black has doubled c-pawns but gains the bishop pair and active piece play. White typically castles queenside and creates a kingside pawn storm, while Black's bishops point at White's queenside setup.
In the Classical Variation, Black develops the bishop to its most active square with 4...Bc5. After 5. Be3 Qf6 6. c3 Nge7, Black builds solid central control while the Bc5 targets d4 directly. White often plays Nb5 or consolidates with Nd2-f3. The Classical Variation leads to double-edged positions with less early tension than the Mieses.
The Scotch Gambit (1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. d4 exd4 4. Bc4) offers the d4 pawn for rapid development and attacking chances. After 4...Nf6 5. e5 d5 6. Bb5 Ne4 7. Nxd4, White has excellent development in exchange for the pawn. Popular at club level for its aggressive nature — Black must return material accurately to equalise.
A critical tactical pattern in the Mieses Variation: after 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. d4 exd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nxc6 bxc6 6. e5 Qe7 7. Qe2 Nd5 8. Nd2??, Black plays 8...Nf4!, forking the queen on e2 and threatening Nxg2+. White loses material. White must instead play 8. c4 (the Mieses main line) or 8. Nc3, activating pieces rather than retreating passively.
In Game 2 of the 1990 World Championship match against Karpov, Kasparov shocked the chess world by playing the Scotch Game — an opening considered outdated since the 19th century. His deep preparation in the Mieses Variation demonstrated unique practical problems that even Karpov's preparation couldn't solve overnight. The game immediately revived the Scotch at the elite level.

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