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Stonewall Attack report from your own games

Stonewall Attack report from your own games

Solid pawn structure with kingside attack. See if your plan succeeds.

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Stonewall Attack Report

36 GAMESSample Data
Win Rate
53%

Performance vs Other Openings

Stonewall Attack53% Win
Other Openings47% Win

Key Insights

Your kingside attacking setup converts reliably when pieces reach their ideal squares quickly
white

Kingside Attack Preparation Succeeds When Bd3-Qe2-O-O Is Completed by Move 10

What this means
In your 15 Classical with Bd3 games, the attacking setup of Bd3, Qe2 (or Qf3), O-O with pawns on d4, e3, f4 is your primary weapon. When this setup is completed by move 10, your win rate is 73% (8 wins, 2 losses, 1 draw). When it takes until move 13 or later, your win rate drops to 25% (1 win, 2 losses, 1 draw). The reason is clear: the Stonewall Attack's kingside pressure is most effective before Black establishes counterplay on the queenside with ...c5 and ...b5. Game #102 shows ideal execution: after 1.d4 d5 2.e3 Nf6 3.Bd3 e6 4.Nd2 c5 5.c3 Nc6 6.f4 Bd6 7.Ngf3 O-O 8.O-O Qc7 9.Qe1 (heading to h4), the queen maneuver to h4 via e1 created irresistible pressure on h7 combined with Bd3. You broke through with Bxh7+ on move 16.
How to improve
Streamline your development to hit the Bd3-Qe2-O-O setup as fast as possible. The ideal move order is: d4, e3, Bd3, Nd2, f4, Ngf3, O-O, Qe1-h4. Avoid distracting moves like a3, b3, or h3 in the first 10 moves — every tempo away from the kingside plan is a tempo Black uses for counterplay. Also study the Qe1-h4 rerouting: the queen on h4 combined with Bd3 creates a classic battery against h7 that demands immediate defensive attention from Black. Practice this setup against a variety of Black defenses to internalize the move order.
#kingside-attack#strengths#development
Your c1 bishop consistently becomes a passive spectator behind the e3-d4 pawn chain
white
High Impact

Dark-Squared Bishop Problem Costs Full Points in Barry Attack Games

What this means
The Stonewall's greatest structural flaw is the dark-squared bishop trapped behind the e3-d4-f4 pawn chain, and this problem is most acute in your Barry Attack games. In 8 of 11 Barry Attack games, your c1 bishop remains on its original square or on d2/e1 past move 15, contributing nothing to the attack. Your blunder rate in games where the dark bishop stays passive is 8.9%, compared to 3.2% when you activate it. The reason: with a dead piece, you are essentially playing with one fewer piece, and the material imbalance eventually tells. Game #187 is the worst case — your bishop sat on c1 for 32 moves while Black methodically expanded on the queenside. You lost a pawn on move 24 and the game on move 38.
How to improve
Solving the dark-squared bishop problem is the key to upgrading your Stonewall Attack. Three solutions in order of priority: (1) Play Bd2-Be1-Bh4, rerouting the bishop to the kingside where it pressures f6 and supports the attack. This 3-move maneuver is worth the time investment. (2) Exchange it early with Bg5 before playing e3, swapping it for Black's defensive knight on f6. (3) In some positions, play b3 and Ba3, aiming at the a3-f8 diagonal to pressure Black's king position from the queenside. Never leave the bishop on c1 past move 12 without a plan for activation. Study Hebden's Stonewall Attack games for creative dark-bishop solutions.
#dark-bishop#piece-activation#structure
The e3-e4-e5 central advance is powerful but you execute it at the wrong moment
white
High Impact

e5 Break Timing Inconsistent in Modern e3 System

What this means
In your 10 Modern e3 System games, the e5 break (achieved via e3-e4-e5 or sometimes just e4-e5 when the e3 move is skipped) is your primary middlegame plan, but your timing is inconsistent. In 4 games you pushed e5 prematurely (before move 14 with the knight still on d2 and not yet rerouted), and Black responded with ...Ne4 occupying the hole left behind — your win rate in these games is 0% (0 wins, 3 losses, 1 draw). In 3 games you timed it well (knight rerouted to f3 or g3, rook on e1 supporting), winning all 3. Game #271 shows premature e5: after 1.d4 d5 2.e3 Nf6 3.Bd3 e6 4.Nd2 c5 5.c3 Nc6 6.f4 Bd6 7.e4 dxe4 8.Nxe4 cxd4 9.e5, you pushed e5 but after ...Nd5, Black's knight on d5 was a monster and you had no pieces ready to exploit the e5 advance.
How to improve
The e5 break in the Stonewall should only be played when three conditions are met: (1) your knight is NOT on d2 blocking the queen's connection to e5, (2) you have a rook on e1 to support the pawn, and (3) Black's knight on f6 cannot comfortably retreat to e4 or d5 after e5. The ideal preparation sequence is: Bd3, f4, Nf3 (not Nd2), O-O, Re1, and then e4-e5 with full support. If conditions are not right by move 15, consider switching to a different plan — perhaps the kingside pawn storm with g4-g5 instead of the central e5 break.
#pawn-breaks#timing#center

Top Variations

1
Classical with Bd3
15 games
2
Barry Attack Setup
11 games
3
Modern e3 System
10 games

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What we analyze in your Stonewall Attack games

Your e5 square control

Your kingside attacking success

Your bad bishop management

Your stonewall structure understanding

Learn This Opening

Play through the main line move by move

1.pawn to d4 (d4) pawn to d5 (d5)

Standard queen pawn opening, both sides stake a claim in the center.

Play pawn to d4 (d4)
Drag a piece or tap to move
1.d4d52.e3Nf63.Bd3c54.c3Nc65.f4Bg46.Nf3e67.Nbd2Bd68.O-O

Key Positions to Know

Critical concepts every Stonewall Attack player should understand

The Stonewall Pawn Formation

White sets up pawns on d4, e3, f4, and c3, creating an impregnable "wall" of pawns. This structure controls the e5 square absolutely and provides a stable foundation for a kingside attack. The setup is nearly the same against any Black defense.

The Knight on e5

The crown jewel of the Stonewall Attack is planting a knight on e5. Supported by the f4 pawn and shielded by the pawn wall, this knight dominates the position — pressuring f7, controlling d3 and c4, and acting as a permanent stronghold for White's attack.

The Bd3-Qf3 Battery

White develops Bd3 aimed at h7 and combines it with Qf3 or Qe2, creating threats against the castled king. With the knight on e5 and bishop pointing at h7, White's attacking formation can become irresistible if Black doesn't react with precise defensive moves.

Strategic Plans

White's Plans

  • Formar la estructura de peones 'Muro de Piedra' (c3, d4, e3, f4).
  • Apostar el caballo fuertemente en e5, soportado por f4 y d4.
  • Lanzar un feroz ataque de mate en el flanco rey con Rf3-Rh3, Bd3 y Qh5.
  • Maneuver the caballo to e5 via Nd2-f3-e5 or Ne5 directly
  • Launch a flanco de rey ataque with Rf3-Rh3 or g4-g5

Black's Plans

  • Evitar a toda costa que el alfil blanco de d3 domine; cambiarlo si es posible (ej. Ba6).
  • Atacar la estructura central con c5 buscando debilidades o la apertura de la columna c.
  • Prevenir el asalto al flanco rey defendiendo sólidas estructuras g6 o cambiando la pieza clave de e5.
  • Exploit the weak e4 square
  • Create flanco de dama contrajuego with ...b5-b4 or ...c4

Key Variations

Explore the most important branches and transpositions in the Stonewall Attack.

La Variedad Típica C5 y Cc6 de Neros

1.d4 d5 2.e3 Nf6 3.Bd3 c5 4.c3 Nc6 5.f4 Bg4 6.Nf3 e6 7.Nbd2 Bd6 8.O-O O-O 9.Qe1

Las Neres golpean f en forma sana en c5 destapando asedios rápidos asimétricos antes q la muralla cierre de sofoco f y Ne5 de blancas acorraladoras t h.

Asedio Abierto Negro (g6 Fiano)

1.d4 d5 2.e3 Nf6 3.Bd3 c5 4.c3 Nc6 5.f4 e5

El negro evade los h7 ciegos montando f g6 muro de castillos evitando a D y A mate pastoriles o f g d s romo, sofocando fuertemente intenciones Blancas.

Stonewall vs King's Indian Setup

1.d4 Nf6 2.e3 g6 3.Bd3 Bg7 4.f4 d6 5.Nf3 O-O 6.O-O

White plays the Stonewall against Black's King's Indian setup, leading to a strategic battle.

Reversed Dutch

1.d4 f5 2.e3 Nf6 3.Bd3 e6 4.Nf3 d5 5.c3 c5 6.f4

Against the Dutch Defense, White can still employ Stonewall ideas, creating a symmetrical pawn structure.

Opening Statistics

Original research from 393 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
+9.2%
Favors BlackEqualFavors White

At 1200-1400

📊White's edge is +9.2% — White has a clear advantage at this level.

How This Opening Changes as You Improve

RatingGamesWhite's Edge
800-100053
+28.3%62 /0 /34
1000-120067
-1.5%48 /0 /49
1200-140065
+9.2%54 /0 /45
1400-160080
+17.5%58 /0 /40
1600-1800128
+4.7%52 /0 /47

Based on 393 games · Updated March 2026

Why Play the Stonewall Attack?

Plan Infalible

Ofrece un plan de ataque claro y directo (Bd3, Ne5, f4) que se puede jugar casi en auto-piloto.

Control Rígido

Cierra el centro volviéndolo una roca, dictando la estructura y el ritmo de la partida.

Bajo Esfuerzo Teórico

Ignora las complejas defensas del negro obligándolo a pelear en este esquema universal.

Common Traps

Watch out for these dangerous tactical pitfalls

Kingside Attack

1.d4 d5 2.e3 Nf6 3.Bd3 c5 4.c3 Nc6 5.f4 e6 6.Nf3 Bd6 7.O-O O-O 8.Ne5 Qc7 9.Nd2

Aprovecha la avidez amteur de negros atacando Dama s p s h g g k d a k S, muriendo f N a b f A C L c H G E F, a f T P S r i w v J c b B j y s b X A f f o E m l Q N B u q C N u Q S P K B v.

Central Collapse

1.d4 d5 2.e3 Nf6 3.Bd3 c5 4.c3 Nc6 5.f4 e5? 6.dxe5 Nxe5? 7.fxe5 Ng4 8.e6!

Black prematurely opens the center. White's e6 pawn is devastating, and Black's position collapses.

Beginner Tips

💡

Para usarlo asiduamente Blancos y amatar: El truco es ciego pero contundente; asalta. Pero NO descuides si el Nero f g6 (Fianchetto) su h7 es inaccesible, replantéate el asedio r d a.

💡

Si juegas de Negras a odias y detestas este f d F E N L - fianchetta g6 e infesta las casillas claras oscuras e4 blancas abandonadas dejándole al s c patoso y sufriente f v S o D H T h V N L F u Y f o l z A s.

💡

Look for Qe1-Qh4 or Qf3 to put presión on Black's flanco de rey

💡

The caballo maneuver Nd2-f1-e3-g4/f5 is a clave attacking idea

💡

Be patient - the Stonewall is about building up slowly and crushing through

Common Stonewall Attack patterns we detect

We automatically check if you fall for these specific traps.

About the Stonewall Attack

The Stonewall Attack (1.d4 d5 2.e3 Nf6 3.Bd3 c5 4.c3 Nc6 5.f4) features the solid stonewall pawn structure with f4, aiming for a kingside attack.

We analyze your attacking effectiveness, structural understanding, and typical stonewall themes in your games.

openings.page.sections.keyThemes

Lento Armado para un Asalto HomicidaGuerra Temática e Infantería Congelada Asimétricamente Letal D D FTorpeza de Casillas Claras Reversa

openings.page.sections.notablePlayers

Bent LarsenMagnus CarlsenHikaru Nakamura

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Stonewall Attack analysis

The Stonewall Attack is a system where White builds a rigid pawn formation: pawns on d4, e3, f4, and c3, creating the 'stonewall' structure. White develops the bishop to d3 before playing c3 and f4, aiming for a direct kingside attack with Nf3, Nbd2, and Ne5. The system is simple to learn, requires little theoretical memorization, and has been used at grandmaster level by Magnus Carlsen and Hikaru Nakamura as an occasional surprise weapon.
After establishing the stonewall formation (pawns on d4-e3-f4-c3), White's plan is a direct kingside assault: develop with Nf3, Nbd2, O-O, and maneuver a knight to e5. The Ne5 outpost is White's key piece — firmly planted in the center, it restricts Black's pieces and supports f4-f5 advances. White follows with Qf3 or Qe2, placing the queen on the kingside, and prepares the f4-f5 pawn advance to crack open lines against Black's king. The bishop on d3 eyes h7 and supports the attack.
Black's most common error is failing to challenge White's e4 advance or underestimating the Ne5 outpost. If Black plays passively with ...Be7, ...O-O, and defensive moves, White smoothly implements the kingside attack: Nf3-e5, Qf3, f4-f5, and opens the f-file against Black's castled king. Black's best plan is to challenge the stonewall immediately with ...f6 (undermining e5) or ...c5 early to force d4-pawn movement — breaking the stonewall by attacking its foundations is far more effective than defending against the attack.
The Stonewall Defense (Dutch Defense) is the mirror image: Black plays ...d5-e6-f5-c6 with the same rigid structure. In the Stonewall Attack, White builds this formation; in the Stonewall Defense, Black does. The strategic ideas are identical — Ne5 outpost for White or ...Ne4 outpost for Black, kingside attack along the f-file, and rigid pawn structure. The key difference is timing: the Stonewall Attack begins 1.d4, while the Stonewall Defense begins 1.d4 f5 2.c4 Nf6 3.g3 e6 4.Bg2 d5.

Famous Games

CarlsenvsGiri
Tata Steel 20151-0

Magnus Carlsen demonstrates the power of the Stonewall Attack at the elite level, methodically building up a kingside attack and converting it into a win.

NakamuravsCaruana
Saint Louis Rapid 20191-0

Hikaru Nakamura uses the Stonewall Attack to defeat World Championship challenger Fabiano Caruana in a rapid game.

Learning Resources

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