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Torre Attack report from your own games

Torre Attack report from your own games

System opening with bite. Discover if your Bg5 pressure delivers wins.

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Torre Attack Report

38 GAMESSample Data
Win Rate
50%

Performance vs Other Openings

Torre Attack50% Win
Other Openings45% Win

Key Insights

Piece Placement
white
High Impact

Bg5 Pin Exploitation Is Inconsistent After Move 8

What this means
In 38 Torre Attack games, you play the characteristic Bg5 pin on move 2-3 consistently but fail to follow up effectively in 16 games. When Black breaks the pin with ...Be7 or ...h6, you retreat the bishop without leveraging the tempo advantage. Your win rate when you extract a concession from the pin (doubled pawns, weakened kingside) is 68%, but it drops to 39% when Black unpins without consequence.
How to improve
After Bg5, decide early whether you want to trade on f6 to damage Black's pawn structure or maintain the pin to restrict Black's development. If Black plays ...h6, consider Bh4 to keep the tension rather than automatically retreating to f4. The pin is most effective when combined with Nbd2-e4, threatening to reinforce the pressure. Only play Bxf6 when you can exploit the doubled pawns with a concrete plan like e4-e5 or a queenside pawn majority.
#bg5-pin#piece-placement#tension
Pawn Structure
white
High Impact

The e4 Break Is Played Too Early in 45% of Games

What this means
You push e4 before completing development in 17 of 38 games. When you play e4 prematurely (before moves like Nbd2, Be2, and O-O), Black can challenge the center with ...d5 or ...e5 and your position becomes overextended. Your win rate with a well-timed e4 is 62%, but only 35% when you rush it.
How to improve
The e4 break in the Torre should be a prepared central strike, not an automatic push. Complete your development with Nbd2, Be2, and O-O first. The ideal moment for e4 is when your knight can recapture on e4 from d2 and your pieces are coordinated. If Black plays ...d5 early, consider c3 and e3 to build a solid center first, then push e4 only when your pieces are ready to support it. Think of e4 as a middlegame decision, not an opening move.
#e4-break#pawn-structure#timing
Positional Weakness
white
High Impact

Dark Square Control Collapses After Trading the Bg5

What this means
After trading your dark-squared bishop on f6 (which occurs in 24 of 38 games), you fail to compensate for the loss of dark square control in 15 of those games. Black's remaining dark-squared bishop often dominates the a1-h8 diagonal, and you struggle to contest squares like e5 and c5. Your win rate in these positions is only 33%.
How to improve
After Bxf6, you must fight for dark squares with your remaining pieces. Place a knight on e5 as a permanent outpost — this is the single most important move. Use f4 to reinforce the knight and control the e5-g5 diagonal. If you cannot maintain a knight on e5, consider c4-c5 to restrict Black's dark-squared bishop. The key insight is that Bxf6 should only happen when you have a concrete dark-square compensation plan, not just to double pawns.
#dark-squares#bishop-trade#positional-play

Top Variations

1
Classical Setup
18 games
2
Anti-Grünfeld
11 games
3
Torre vs King's Indian
9 games

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What we analyze in your Torre Attack games

Your Bg5 pressure and pin exploitation

Your timing of the Ne5 central break

Your response to ...h6 bishop challenges

Your kingside attack execution

Your avoidance of passive system play

Learn This Opening

Play through the main line move by move

1.pawn to d4 (d4) knight to f6 (Nf6)

White opens with the queen's pawn, controlling the center. Black responds with the knight to f6, a flexible developing move that controls key central squares and prepares to challenge White's center. (翻訳済み)

Play pawn to d4 (d4)
Drag a piece or tap to move
1.d4Nf62.Nf3e63.Bg5c54.e3Be75.Nbd2O-O6.c3b67.Bd3Bb7

Key Positions to Know

Critical concepts every Torre Attack player should understand

The Bg5 Pin

With 3.Bg5, White pins the f6 knight against the queen, immediately creating tension. This pin forces Black to make concessions — either weaken the kingside with ...h6, block with ...Be7, or accept a structural change after Bxf6.

The Ne5 Outpost

White's ideal plan is to plant a knight on e5, supported by the d4 pawn and the Bg5 bishop. From e5, the knight pressures f7, controls key central squares, and restricts Black's pieces. This outpost is the backbone of White's middlegame strategy.

Queenside Castling Attack

In aggressive Torre Attack lines, White can castle queenside and launch a kingside pawn storm with h4-h5. With the bishop already on g5 creating pin pressure, this direct assault can become devastating, especially if Black has weakened the kingside with ...h6.

Strategic Plans

White's Plans

  • 中央を維持する
  • キングサイドでの攻撃の機会を探る

Black's Plans

  • ...c5で中央に挑戦する
  • ビショップのペアを活用する

Key Variations

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

Classical Torre

1.d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 e6 3.Bg5 c5 4.e3 Be7 5.Nbd2 O-O 6.c3 b6 7.Bd3

The most common setup for White in the Torre Attack. After 7...Bb7 8.O-O, White has a solid position with natural development. The plan involves Qe2, Rad1 or Rfe1, and Ne4, gradually improving piece positions. Black has counterplay with ...d5 or ...cxd4. This variation exemplifies the Torre philosophy: solid development, central control, and gradual improvement. (翻訳済み)

Torre vs. d5 Setup

1.d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 e6 3.Bg5 d5 4.e3 Be7 5.Nbd2 O-O 6.c3 Nbd7 7.Bd3

When Black plays an early ...d5, White continues with the standard Torre setup. After 7...b6 8.O-O Bb7, White can play for e4 or maintain the solid structure. This system transposes to favorable Queen's Gambit Declined structures where White has avoided the main theoretical lines. The position is strategic with clear plans for both sides. (翻訳済み)

Torre vs. g6 / King's Indian Sidestep

1.d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 g6 3.Bg5

When Black plays 2...g6, the Torre bishop on g5 no longer pins the knight — the f6 knight is not shielded by a queen on d8 in the same way once the fianchetto is in play. White can still continue with Bg5, but the pressure is reduced. The most practical response is to transpose to a solid Anti-King's Indian setup: after 3...Bg7 4.Nbd2 d6 5.e3 O-O 6.Bd3, White has a sound position. Black's ...g6 sidesteps the pin but doesn't refute the Torre — White simply adjusts plans. (翻訳済み)

Wagner Gambit

1.d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 e6 3.Bg5 c5 4.e4

White can gambit the d4 pawn with 4.e4, the sharpest and most aggressive line in the Torre. After 4...cxd4 5.e5 h6 6.Bh4 g5 7.Bg3 Nh5, the position is double-edged and extremely sharp. White sacrifices a pawn for a massive development lead and kingside pressure. The black knight is awkwardly placed on h5, and White's pieces flood in. After 8.Nbd2 Nxg3 9.hxg3, the open h-file becomes a major attacking weapon. This gambit creates practical problems that are very difficult to solve over the board, making it a fearsome weapon for aggressive players. (翻訳済み)

Torre with Ne5 — Poisoned b2

1.d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 e6 3.Bg5 c5 4.e3 Qb6 5.Nbd2 Qxb2 6.Bd3 Nc6 7.O-O

If Black greedily captures the b2 pawn, White gets tremendous compensation. After 7...Qb6 8.Rb1 Qc7 9.e4, White has strong central control and attacking chances. This variation shows that the Torre isn't toothless - tactical opportunities exist. Black should decline the pawn with 5...Nc6 instead. (翻訳済み)

Torre with h6

1.d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 e6 3.Bg5 h6 4.Bxf6 Qxf6 5.e3 d5 6.c4

If Black plays ...h6 early, White can exchange bishop for knight. After 6...c6 7.Nc3, White has a favorable Caro-Kann type structure. Black's doubled f-pawns are weak, though the bishop pair provides some compensation. This shows the Torre's flexibility - White can play different structures depending on Black's setup. (翻訳済み)

Torre with cxd4 Exchange

1.d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 e6 3.Bg5 c5 4.e3 cxd4 5.exd4 Be7 6.Nbd2 d6 7.c3 Nbd7 8.Bd3

Black exchanges on d4 early, creating a symmetrical pawn structure. After 8...b6 9.O-O Bb7, the position is strategically balanced. White has a slight space advantage and easier piece development, while Black is solid with no weaknesses. Games often revolve around whether White can create threats before Black completes development. (翻訳済み)

Opening Statistics

Original research from 174 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
-8.4%
Favors BlackEqualFavors White

At 1200-1400

📊White's edge is 8.4% — Black actually scores better at this level.

How This Opening Changes as You Improve

RatingGamesWhite's Edge
800-100015
-6.6%47 /0 /53
1000-120017
0.0%47 /0 /47
1200-140036
-8.4%44 /0 /53
1400-160039
-18.0%41 /0 /59
1600-180067
+22.4%60 /0 /37

Based on 174 games · Updated March 2026

Why Play the Torre Attack?

Easy to Learn and Play

The Torre Attack follows a simple, systematic approach: develop pieces to natural squares, maintain a solid pawn structure, and look for tactical opportunities. You don't need to memorize 20 moves of theory - understanding the typical plans and piece placements is enough. Perfect for players who want a reliable opening without extensive study. (翻訳済み)

Avoids Main-Line Theory

By playing the Torre, you sidestep the heavy theoretical battlegrounds of main-line Queen's Gambit, Nimzo-Indian, and Queen's Indian systems. Your opponents can't rely on deep preparation, and games are decided by understanding and skill rather than memorization. This gives you practical chances against stronger opponents. (翻訳済み)

Solid and Flexible

The Torre provides a rock-solid position with no weaknesses. Your pawn structure is flexible, allowing you to adapt to Black's setup. You can play for a small advantage without risking much, making it perfect for tournament play where consistency matters. (翻訳済み)

Practical Results

The Torre has been used successfully by World Champions Petrosian and Spassky, proving its viability at the highest level. Its practical nature creates chances to outplay opponents in the middlegame, and even if you don't get an advantage, you'll never be worse. (翻訳済み)

Common Traps

Watch out for these dangerous tactical pitfalls

Poisoned b2 Pawn Trap

1.d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 e6 3.Bg5 c5 4.e3 Qb6 5.Nbd2 Qxb2 6.Bd3 Nc6 7.O-O Qb6 8.Rb1 Qa6 9.e4

Black grabs the b2 pawn but falls hopelessly behind in development. After 9...cxd4 10.e5 Nd5 11.Bxd8 Kxd8 12.Ng5, White has a winning attack with Black's king stuck in the center. Black should decline the pawn with 5...Nc6. This trap has caught countless unsuspecting players who thought they could safely grab material. (翻訳済み)

Early h6 Blunder

1.d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 e6 3.Bg5 h6 4.Bh4 g5 5.Bg3 Nh5 6.e3

Black plays ...h6 and ...g5 too aggressively, weakening the kingside catastrophically. After 6...Nxg3 7.hxg3, Black's kingside is full of holes and the king has no safe haven. White will castle queenside and launch a devastating attack. Black should simply play 4...Be7 or accept the trade on f6. (翻訳済み)

Torre Trap — Queen Sortie Punished

1.d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 e6 3.Bg5 c5 4.e3 cxd4 5.exd4 Qb6 6.Qc1 Ne4 7.Bf4 Nc6 8.c3

Black attacks b2 with 5...Qb6, an annoying jab at White's structure. But after 6.Qc1, the queen quietly steps aside and defends b2 while keeping all piece development intact. The bishop on f4 picks up an excellent diagonal and Black's queen sortie has gained nothing while White's development continues smoothly. The lesson: don't send the queen on early raids in the Torre. (翻訳済み)

Knight Pin Exploitation

1.d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 e6 3.Bg5 Be7 4.Nbd2 O-O 5.c3 d5 6.e3 Nbd7 7.Bd3 Re8 8.Bxf6 Nxf6 9.Qc2

Black plays ...Re8 too early without preparing it. After 9...g6 10.h4!, White has strong kingside attacking chances. The bishop sacrifice on h7 is threatened, and Black's kingside becomes vulnerable. Black should play 7...c5 or 7...b6 instead, maintaining flexibility. (翻訳済み)

Beginner Tips

💡

Always play Bg5 pinning the knight - this is the signature move of the Torre (翻訳済み)

💡

Standard development order: Nf3, Bg5, e3, Nbd2, Bd3, O-O, then improve your position (翻訳済み)

💡

Support your center with c3 and e3 - this solid structure is key to the Torre (翻訳済み)

💡

Don't rush with attacks - the Torre is about solid development and gradual improvement (翻訳済み)

💡

Exchange your dark-squared bishop (Bxf6) when it helps your position or weakens Black's structure (翻訳済み)

💡

Maneuver your knight from d2 to e4 via f3 to increase central pressure (翻訳済み)

💡

Castle early to get your king to safety before starting operations (翻訳済み)

💡

Study typical middlegame plans - the Torre is more about understanding than memorization (翻訳済み)

Common Misconceptions

"b2ポーンは無料で取れる — 簡単な余分なポーン"

5...Qxb2でb2を取るのは壊滅的なミスです。6.Bd3 Nc6 7.O-Oの後、白の展開のリードは圧倒的で、9.e4が必勝の攻撃を与えます。黒のクイーンはクイーンサイドに閉じ込められ、安全な逃げ場がありません。このトラップは、数千のゲームを即座に終わらせてきました。

"トーレは、ビショップがf4ではなくg5にあるロンドン・システムに過ぎない"

f6へのピンは戦略的にすべてを変えます。Bg5のピンは黒のキングサイドの構造に即座にプレッシャーをかけ、e5マスを弱め、...Ne4を防ぎます。ロンドンのBf4は純粋に防御的ですが、トーレのBg5は積極的に攻撃的です。これらは根本的に異なるミドルゲームの計画につながります。

"3...g6はトーレ・アタックを論破する"

フィアンケットはピンを避けますが、オープニングを論破するわけではありません。白は単に適応します:3...Bg7 4.Nbd2 O-O 5.e3 d6 6.Bd3の後、白は完全に健全なアンチ・キングズ・インディアンの局面を持っています。黒は柔軟性の低いポーン構造と引き換えにピンを避けました。トーレはシステムであり、適応するのです。

Common Torre Attack patterns we detect

We automatically check if you fall for these specific traps.

About the Torre Attack

The Torre Attack (1. d4 Nf6 2. Nf3 e6/d5 3. Bg5) is a solid system opening where White develops the bishop to g5, creating immediate pressure.

We analyze your pressure maintenance, tactical opportunities, and attacking effectiveness. We identify where system play becomes too passive.

openings.page.sections.keyThemes

System approachBg5 pinSolid structureEasy to learnFlexible plansPractical play

openings.page.sections.notablePlayers

Carlos TorreTigran PetrosianBoris SpasskyArtur Yusupov

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Torre Attack analysis

The Torre Attack (1. d4 Nf6 2. Nf3 e6/d5 3. Bg5) is a solid system opening where White develops the bishop to g5, creating immediate pressure.
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We analyze your pressure maintenance, tactical opportunities, and attacking effectiveness. We identify where system play becomes too passive.
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Use Kingsights to identify your specific weaknesses in the Torre Attack. Our analysis shows your win rate, recurring mistakes, and provides actionable tips. Focus on the patterns where you lose most often and practice those specific positions.

Famous Games

Carlos TorrevsEmanuel Lasker
Moscow 19251-0

The most famous Torre Attack game ever played — and one of the most celebrated combinations in all of chess history. With Lasker's pieces entangled, Torre unleashed the 'Windmill': a cycle of discovered checks using his rook on g7 and bishop on g5, winning material on almost every move. The sequence went 25.Bg5-h6-Bg5 with Re5-Re7-Re5, a repeating seesaw of checks that stripped away queen, rook, and pawns. The former World Champion was powerless to stop it. This game made Torre immortal, and made the Torre Attack famous. (翻訳済み)

Tigran PetrosianvsEfim Geller
Candidates Tournament 19531-0

Future World Champion Petrosian demonstrated the Torre Attack's positional potential in this strategic masterpiece. His patient maneuvering and gradual improvement of piece positions exemplified the Torre's strategic richness. Petrosian used the Torre throughout his career, proving it was viable at the world championship level. (翻訳済み)

Boris SpasskyvsMikhail Tal
World Championship Candidates 19651-0

World Champion Spassky used the Torre Attack to defeat the legendary attacker Tal. His solid play in the opening led to a favorable middlegame where he outmaneuvered Tal positionally. This game showed that even the most aggressive opponents can be neutralized by the Torre's solid structure. (翻訳済み)

Artur YusupovvsGarry Kasparov
USSR Championship 19811-0

Yusupov achieved the rare feat of defeating future World Champion Kasparov with the Torre Attack. His solid opening play transitioned into a strong middlegame advantage, demonstrating that the Torre creates practical problems even for the world's best players. This game validated the Torre as a serious weapon. (翻訳済み)

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