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Scandinavian Defense report from your own games

Scandinavian Defense report from your own games

Bold and direct. Discover if your Scandinavian queen placement wins games.

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Sample Report

Scandinavian Defense Report

37 GAMESSample Data
Win Rate
49%

Performance vs Other Openings

Scandinavian Defense49% Win
Other Openings44% Win

Key Insights

Queen Development
black
High Impact

Queen Chased for 3+ Tempi in 68% of Qd5 Recapture Games

What this means
When you recapture on d5 with the queen (both Qd8 and Qd6 lines), White gains tempo attacking your queen in 25 of 37 games. In those games where your queen was chased for 3 or more moves, your win rate is only 36%. The queen is powerful but vulnerable on the open board — each tempo White gains developing with threats equals a half-move advantage in the race for piece coordination.
How to improve
Choose your queen retreat square deliberately. In the Qd8 Main Line, retreat to d8 immediately — do not linger on d5 hoping for tricks. In the Qd6 Bronstein, place the queen on d6 where it controls key central squares and is harder to attack. After the queen retreats, develop pieces rapidly: ...Nf6, ...Bf5 (or ...Bg4), ...e6, ...Be7, and castle. The goal is to complete development within 2 moves of the queen retreating. Never allow the queen to be chased to a square where it blocks your own development (avoid ...Qa5 blocking the a-rook).
#queen-development#tempo#opening-theory
Development Tempo
black
High Impact

Development Completed 3 Moves Later Than White on Average

What this means
Across your 37 Scandinavian games, you castle on average at move 10.3, while White castles at move 7.1. This 3-move gap means White consistently gets the initiative in the early middlegame. In games where you castle by move 8, your win rate is 61%. When castling comes after move 11, it drops to 31%. The Scandinavian already concedes time with ...Qxd5 — you cannot afford further delays.
How to improve
After your queen retreats, follow a strict development protocol: (1) ...Nf6 to develop with tempo against White's e4 or d4, (2) ...Bf5 or ...Bg4 to develop the light bishop outside the pawn chain before ...e6, (3) ...e6 and ...Be7 (or ...Bd6 in aggressive lines), (4) castle immediately. Do not play ...c6 and ...a6 before developing pieces — these pawn moves can wait. In the Marshall Gambit (...Nf6), you are already a pawn down, so rapid development is even more critical. Every piece should have a purpose within the first 10 moves.
#development#castling#tempo-recovery
Central Pawn Play

Central Pawns Remain Static in 54% of Games Past Move 15

What this means
In 20 of 37 games, your central pawns (d and e pawns) stay on their initial squares or on e6/d6 past move 15 without creating active pawn play. White then dominates the center with e4-d4 and your pieces lack space. When you play ...c5 or ...e5 breaks before move 15, your win rate is 56%, but it drops to 40% when the center remains static.
How to improve
The Scandinavian is not a passive defense — Black must fight for central space. After completing development, play ...c5 to challenge White's d4 pawn. If White has played e4, consider ...e5 in positions where it does not leave your d-pawn backward. In the Qd6 Bronstein line, the queen on d6 supports both ...c5 and ...e5 breaks. In the Qd8 line, prepare ...c5 with ...Nbd7 and ...Nb6 to pressure c4 and d5 squares. A static center in the Scandinavian means Black is simply worse — central pawn play is mandatory, not optional.
#central-pawns#c5-break#e5-break

Top Variations

1
Qd8 Main Line
15 games
2
Qd6 Bronstein
13 games
3
Nf6 Marshall Gambit
9 games

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What we analyze in your Scandinavian Defense games

Your queen placement decision (Qa5 vs Qd8 vs Qd6)

Your ability to overcome development lag

Your bishop activity on f5 and g4

Your piece coordination and counterplay generation

Your endgame conversion in equal positions

Learn This Opening

Play through the main line move by move

1.pawn to e4 (e4) pawn to d5 (d5)

Black immediately challenges White's center with the most direct response possible. Unlike 1...e5 or 1...c5, the Scandinavian Defense forces an immediate pawn trade, leading to unique strategic battles. This provocative move has been played for centuries and remains popular today.

Opponent is playing…
1.e4d52.exd5Qxd53.Nc3Qa54.d4Nf65.Nf3Bf56.Bc4e67.Bd2c68.O-ONbd7

Key Positions to Know

Critical concepts every Scandinavian Defense player should understand

The Immediate ...d5 Challenge

With 1...d5, the Scandinavian immediately challenges White's e4 pawn. After 2.exd5 Qxd5, Black's queen comes out early — breaking classical principles — but gains central influence. The queen will retreat to a5 or d6, and Black develops harmoniously behind it.

The Modern 2...Nf6

Instead of recapturing with the queen, 2...Nf6 avoids early queen exposure. After 3.d4 Nxd5, the position resembles a reversed Alekhine's Defense. Black gets a solid setup with ...g6, ...Bg7, and rapid development while avoiding the theoretical burden of the queen lines.

The ...Bf5 Fortress

After ...Qa5, Black develops with ...Bf5 (or ...Bg4), ...e6, ...c6, and ...Nf6, creating an incredibly solid fortress. Every piece has a natural square, there are no weaknesses, and the position is easy to play. This simplicity is the Scandinavian's greatest practical asset.

Strategic Plans

White's Plans

  • Ganar tiempo desarrollando piezas atacando a la reina negra centralizada.
  • Formar un fuerte centro con peones y explotar el rápido desarrollo.
  • Tratar de sacar ventaja de la posible falta de coordinación temprana del negro.
  • Apunta a la dama negra con movimientos como Ad2 y Cb5.
  • Desarrollar activamente los alfiles en c4 y g5 o f4.
  • Crea amenazas en el flanco de rey con Ad3, Ce5 y f4-f5
  • En el final, utiliza la mejor estructura de peones para crear peones pasados.

Black's Plans

  • Recuperar y llevar la Dama a casillas como a5 o d8 y luego maniobrar alrededor del espacio blanco.
  • Finalizar desarrollo de piezas menores y preparar presión hacia el flanco rey.
  • Proteger sólidamente el rey tras el rápido desmantelamiento central.
  • Desafía el centro de las blancas con ...c5 en el momento adecuado
  • Busque oportunidades tácticas que involucren a la reina y los alfiles activos.
  • Intercambia piezas cuando estés apretado para aliviar la posición.
  • En el final, utiliza la estructura flexible de peones para crear contrajuego.
  • Mantén activo el alfil de casillas claras: es tu mejor pieza

Key Variations

Explore the most important branches and transpositions in the Scandinavian Defense.

La Salida Antigua Principal a Da5 o Dd6

1.e4 d5 2.exd5 Qxd5 3.Nc3 Qa5 4.d4 Nf6 5.Nf3 Bf5

Las Negras retoman la prenda central capturada inmediatamente mandando su mayor arma expuesta al viento para molestar pero evadir caballerías tempranas asestando clavadas indirectas tras la caza del Nc3 veloz.

La Furia Táctica y Retraso con Cf6

1.e4 d5 2.exd5 Qxd5 3.Nc3 Qa5 4.d4 Nf6 5.Nf3 c6

Cede temporalmente una pequeña infantería por sacar armamento temprano letal y arrollador intentando coger el premio d5 al paso o en táctica encadenada en enroques relámpagos sin depender de mover prematuro d5 para capturas.

Portuguese Variation

1.e4 d5 2.exd5 Nf6 3.d4 Bg4

Black plays 2...Nf6 (the Modern Variation) instead of recapturing immediately. After 3.d4, Black develops the bishop to g4, creating immediate pressure. This aggressive system gambits a pawn for rapid development and attacking chances. White must play accurately or face a dangerous initiative. Popular among attacking players.

Icelandic Gambit

1.e4 d5 2.exd5 Nf6 3.c4 e6

A sharp gambit where Black plays 2...Nf6 and after 3.c4 (the Panov variation) gambits with ...e6!?, sacrificing a second pawn for rapid development. After 4.dxe6 Bxe6, Black has tremendous piece activity and attacking chances. Very dangerous in blitz and practical play, though objectively White should be better with accurate defense.

Blackburne-Kloosterboer Gambit

1.e4 d5 2.exd5 c6 3.dxc6 Nxc6

Black offers a second pawn with 2...c6, and after 3.dxc6 Nxc6, Black has rapid development and central control. The knight on c6 and the open lines give Black compensation for the pawn. While objectively dubious, it creates practical problems and has surprised many unprepared opponents.

Mieses-Kotroc Variation

1.e4 d5 2.exd5 Qxd5 3.Nc3 Qd6

An old-fashioned approach where Black places the queen on d6 instead of a5. This system is less popular today because the queen can become a target on d6. After 4.d4 Nf6 5.Nf3, White has comfortable development. However, the variation remains playable and occasionally appears in modern games.

Opening Statistics

Original research from 29,632 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
+2.1%
Favors BlackEqualFavors White

At 1200-1400

📊White's edge is +2.1% — a slight advantage for White.

How This Opening Changes as You Improve

RatingGamesWhite's Edge
800-10005,672
+0.2%48 /0 /48
1000-12006,435
+4.5%51 /0 /46
1200-14005,914
+2.1%50 /0 /47
1400-16005,968
+0.5%49 /0 /48
1600-18005,643
-0.6%48 /0 /49

Based on 29,632 games · Updated March 2026

Why Play the Scandinavian Defense?

Apertura Abierta Inmediata

Abre columnas y diagonales al instante y desafía al blanco de inmediato.

Estructuras Claras y Sólidas

Ofrece planes estructurales bien definidos para las negras y una rápida activación de piezas.

Desequilibrio Temprano

Lleva el juego a terrenos que a veces los jugadores de 1.e4 desprecian por simples, sorprendiéndolos.

Common Traps

Watch out for these dangerous tactical pitfalls

Early Scholar's Mate Attempt

1.e4 d5 2.exd5 Qxd5 3.Nc3 Qa5 4.Bc4? Nf6 5.Nf3 Bg4 6.h3? Bxf3 7.Qxf3 Nc6

El gran cebo fatal amator de Cc3 para ganar un falso o engañoso movimiento extra con las Blancas sobre las expuestas Damas y que acaban a menudos siendo el propio ancla o ataúd si la Dama embosca y arrincona diagonales a o h cortando a un Alfil de Blancas demasiado arrugado en d2 con estacazos letales o clavándola contra sus propios peones envenenados b2.

Nb5 Trap

1.e4 d5 2.exd5 Qxd5 3.Nc3 Qa5 4.d4 Nf6 5.Nf3 Bg4 6.h3 Bh5? 7.Bd2! Qb6 8.Nb5!

Black's bishop retreat to h5 instead of taking on f3 allows the tactical blow Nb5. After 8...Qd8 9.Bc3, White threatens Nxc7+ and Black is in serious trouble. The correct move is 6...Bxf3! 7.Qxf3 c6, maintaining a solid position.

Premature ...Qa5-a4 Trap

1.e4 d5 2.exd5 Qxd5 3.Nc3 Qa5 4.b4!? Qxb4 5.Rb1 Qd6 6.d4 Nf6 7.Bd3

White's 4.b4!? is a trappy pawn sacrifice. If Black greedily captures, White gets tremendous compensation with Rb1, d4, and rapid development. The queen on b4 becomes a target and Black struggles to complete development. Black should decline with 4...Qd8 or 4...Nf6, maintaining a normal position.

Icelandic Gambit Refutation

1.e4 d5 2.exd5 Nf6 3.c4! e6? 4.dxe6 Bxe6 5.d4 Bxc4 6.Bxc4 Bb4+ 7.Nc3

In the Icelandic Gambit, Black must play accurately. If White responds with the strong 3.c4!, Black should avoid 3...e6? which loses time. After the position unfolds, White is simply up two pawns with a good position. Black should play 3...c6 instead, leading to complex play.

Beginner Tips

💡

Si no te importan sus reputaciones amargas contra Grandes Maestros perfectos en la base de la élite de campeonato largo o torneos mundiales tediosos donde pierde su filo venenoso o es considerada endeble, la Defensa es la herramienta dorada y mágica sin escrúpulos ni finuras bajo las puntuaciones ELO 1500 - destrozando oponentes temblorosos en su agresiva y arrogante cacería rápida forzando choques frontales por la falta de un escudo blindado ante los intercambios que no respetan convenciones clásicas de e4 con simetrías lentas si detestas estudiar las 16 lineas y celadas oscuras inservibles eternamente de Ruy en aperturas sin piedad o aburrimiento.

💡

Blancos: juega la caza C con Cc3 rápido, sácale tempos y castígalo si yerra una pieza en retiro. Usa el don del tiempo sabiamente.

💡

Siga el plan de desarrollo estándar: ...Cf6, ...Af5, ...e6, ...c6, ...Cbd7, ...Ae7, O-O

💡

Desafía el centro de las blancas con ...c5 cuando sea el momento adecuado, generalmente después de completar el desarrollo.

💡

No intentes retener el peón extra después de 1.e4 d5; devuélvelo rápidamente para ganar actividad.

💡

Castillo en el flanco de rey en la mayoría de las líneas para poner a tu rey a salvo antes de comenzar operaciones agresivas.

💡

Conserve su alfil de casillas claras: a menudo es su mejor pieza y cambiarlo puede dejar debilidades.

💡

Estudie los finales típicos que surgen: los escandinavos a menudo simplifican a finales estratégicos.

Common Scandinavian Defense patterns we detect

We automatically check if you fall for these specific traps.

About the Scandinavian Defense

The Scandinavian Defense (1. e4 d5) is the most direct counter to 1. e4. Black immediately challenges the center, though the early queen development can lead to tempo loss.

We analyze your queen safety, development efficiency, and counterplay generation. We identify where development lag or passive play leads to losses.

openings.page.sections.keyThemes

Emboscada AgresivaExposición Mortal de DamaDictadura del Tempo de CambioRuptura Directa Absoluta Contra 1.e4 y Cero Retiros Pasivos

openings.page.sections.notablePlayers

Sergey TiviakovMagnus CarlsenEduardas RozentalisKonstantin Landa

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Scandinavian Defense analysis

The Scandinavian Defense (1. e4 d5) is the most direct response to 1. e4 — Black challenges the centre on move one. After 2. exd5, Black must decide: 2...Qxd5 (the main line) or 2...Nf6 (the Modern Variation). The opening appears in a game from Valencia in 1475 — one of the oldest in recorded chess. Its appeal is straightforwardness: Black avoids all the complex Sicilian, French, and Caro-Kann theory and reaches clear strategic positions.
After 2...Qxd5 3. Nc3, Black must choose between 3...Qa5 (the main line) and 3...Qd6 (the Mieses-Kotroc). 3...Qa5 is superior: the queen is active and safe on the edge, supports ...Bf5 development, and cannot be attacked by White's minor pieces easily. The Modern Variation (3...Qa5 4. d4 Nf6 5. Nf3 Bf5) with the bishop developed before ...e6 is Black's best approach.
The Modern Variation is reached via 1. e4 d5 2. exd5 Qxd5 3. Nc3 Qa5 4. d4 Nf6 5. Nf3 Bf5. Black develops the light-squared bishop to f5 before playing ...e6 — a critical move order distinction. Playing ...e6 before ...Bf5 would trap the bishop behind the pawn chain permanently.
The Nb5 trap occurs after 1. e4 d5 2. exd5 Qxd5 3. Nc3 Qa5 4. d4 Nf6 5. Nf3 Bg4 6. h3 Bh5?. Instead of 6...Bxf3!, Black retreats to h5, allowing 7. Bd2! Qb6 8. Nb5! — threatening Nc7+ and Nxa7. After 8...Qd8 9. Bc3, White has a massive advantage. Black must play 6...Bxf3! to exchange the bishop actively.
The b4 pawn sacrifice trap occurs after 1. e4 d5 2. exd5 Qxd5 3. Nc3 Qa5 4. b4!?. If 4...Qxb4?? 5. Rb1 Qd6 6. d4 Nf6 7. Bd3, White has massive development compensation and the queen becomes a constant target. Black must decline with 4...Qd8 or 4...Nf6, returning to normal development.
Ukrainian-Dutch GM Sergey Tiviakov played the Scandinavian in hundreds of games at the highest level. His methodical approach — precise move orders, deep endgame understanding, and refusal to give White early tactical targets — made him nearly unbeatable in this opening. His draw against Kasparov at Tilburg 1997 and crushing victory over Leko at the 2007 European Team Championship established the opening as a legitimate weapon against elite opposition.

Famous Games

KasparovvsTiviakov
Tilburg 19971/2-1/2

GM Sergey Tiviakov, one of the world's leading Scandinavian experts, held a solid draw against World Champion Garry Kasparov. This game demonstrated that the Scandinavian Defense is sound enough to withstand even the strongest attacks, establishing Tiviakov as the opening's modern champion.

RadjabovvsCarlsen
World Blitz Championship 20090-1

World Champion Magnus Carlsen used the Scandinavian Defense to defeat one of the world's strongest players in a blitz game. His dynamic piece play and tactical alertness showcased why the opening works at the highest levels, even in time pressure situations.

LekovsTiviakov
European Team Championship 20070-1

Tiviakov crushed super-GM Peter Leko in the Scandinavian, demonstrating Black's dynamic possibilities. His active piece play and tactical execution proved that Black can play for more than just equality. This game is studied as a model for Black's attacking potential in the opening.

NavaravsRozentalis
European Championship 20050-1

Lithuanian GM Eduardas Rozentalis, another Scandinavian specialist, showed excellent technique in converting a small advantage. His strategic understanding and precise endgame play demonstrated why the opening appeals to positional players who appreciate solid, reliable defenses.

Learning Resources

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