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Italian Game report from your own games

Italian Game report from your own games

Master the classical approach. Discover exactly where your Italian Game plans go wrong in real games.

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Sample Report

Italian Game Report

42 GAMESSample Data
Win Rate
55%

Performance vs Other Openings

Italian Game55% Win
Other Openings49% Win

Key Insights

Central Control
white
High Impact

Early d4 Thrust Wins 64% When Prepared With c3 First

What this means
In 19 Giuoco Piano games, you played d4 without preparation (skipping c3) in 11 of them. Your win rate in those games is only 36%, compared to 75% when you first played c3 to support the d4 advance. Without c3, Black captures ...exd4 and you lose the center, giving Black easy equality and active piece play against your isolated e4 pawn.
How to improve
In the Giuoco Piano, always prepare d4 with c3 first. The standard plan is Bc4, c3, d4 — this ensures that after ...exd4, you recapture with cxd4 maintaining a strong pawn center. The tempo spent on c3 is well worth it because a supported d4 pawn gives you lasting central control. Study Kasparov's games in the Italian where c3-d4 is the backbone of White's strategy.
#d4-break#central-control#pawn-center
Piece Advantage
white

Bishop Pair Advantage Squandered in 58% of Evans Gambit Games

What this means
In 7 of your 12 Evans Gambit games, you obtained the bishop pair by move 12 but then traded one bishop unnecessarily within the next 5 moves. When you maintain the bishop pair into the middlegame, your win rate is 80% (4 out of 5). When you trade a bishop early, it drops to 43%. The Evans Gambit sacrifices a pawn for rapid development and open lines — the bishop pair is a key component of that compensation.
How to improve
After sacrificing b4 in the Evans Gambit, your bishops on c4 and targeting the kingside are your primary attacking weapons. Avoid exchanging Bc4 for Black's knight on d5 unless it opens a decisive tactical line. Instead, retreat the bishop to b3 or a2 to maintain long-diagonal pressure. Keep the dark-squared bishop active on a3 or b2 to exploit Black's weakened dark squares after ...exd4.
#bishop-pair#evans-gambit#piece-retention
Attack Timing
High Impact

Kingside Attacks Launched Too Early Without Full Piece Coordination

What this means
Across your Italian Game repertoire, you initiated kingside pawn storms (h4-h5 or g4-g5) in 9 games before completing development. In 7 of those games, the attack stalled and you lost 5 of them. Meanwhile, when you completed development first (castled, connected rooks, placed rooks on central files) before attacking, your attacking win rate jumped to 71% across 7 games.
How to improve
The Italian Game rewards patience in building an attack. Before pushing kingside pawns, ensure: (1) your king is castled queenside or your king position is secure, (2) both rooks are connected and on useful files, (3) your knights are on strong outpost squares like d5 or f5. A useful benchmark is to have at least 3 pieces aimed at the kingside before initiating a pawn storm. In the Two Knights Defense especially, Black has tactical resources if you overextend too early.
#kingside-attack#development#piece-coordination

Top Variations

1
Giuoco Piano
19 games
2
Evans Gambit
12 games
3
Two Knights Defense
11 games

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What we analyze in your Italian Game

Your execution of the Giuoco Piano slow buildup vs. quick attacks

Your handling of the Evans Gambit sacrifice patterns

Your timing of the d3-d4 central break

Your success rate in opposite-side castling positions

Your piece coordination when attacking f7

Your defensive resilience when Black counterattacks

Learn This Opening

Play through the main line move by move

1.pawn to e4 (e4) pawn to e5 (e5)

Both sides stake their claim in the center with their king pawns. This symmetric opening is the foundation of open games, leading to dynamic positions where both players have equal chances to seize the initiative.

Play pawn to e4 (e4)
Drag a piece or tap to move
1.e4e52.Nf3Nc63.Bc4Bc54.c3Nf65.d4exd46.cxd4Bb4+7.Bd2Bxd2+8.Nbxd2d5

Key Positions to Know

Critical concepts every Italian Game player should understand

Targeting f7

The bishop on c4 eyes the vulnerable f7 pawn from the start. This is the weakest point in Black's position (only defended by the king). Many Italian Game tactics revolve around exploiting this diagonal.

The d3-d4 Central Break

White's key plan in the Giuoco Piano is the d3-d4 push. By first playing d3, c3, and developing pieces, White prepares to blast open the center. Timing this break correctly is the difference between initiative and overextension.

The Evans Gambit Spirit

With b4, White sacrifices a pawn to gain rapid development and a strong center. After ...Bxb4 c3, White gets a powerful pawn center and open lines. This aggressive approach rewards players who prefer dynamic, attacking chess.

Strategic Plans

White's Plans

  • Gebruik de loper op c4 voor druk op f7 en het centrum
  • Speel d4 om een sterke centrale aanwezigheid te bouwen
  • Val aan met f4-f5 in geschikte posities van het agressieve Giuoco Piano
  • Gebruik de d- en centrale lijn na ruils om torens te activeren
  • In het Giuoco Pianissimo, handhaaf de spanning en manoeuvreer langzaam
  • Prepare pawn breaks like d4-d5 or f2-f4 to open lines and create attacking chances
  • Exchange pieces when ahead in development to expose Black's king

Black's Plans

  • Speel ...d6 of ...d5 om het centrum te betwisten
  • Gebruik het paard op f6 om het witte centrum actief te drukken
  • Met ...Lc5, zoek actief ...d5 om de positie te bevrijden
  • Ruil de loper op c4 om de druk op f7 te verlichten
  • Handhaaf de spanning en vermijd voortijdige vereenvoudigingen
  • Look for tactical opportunities based on White's exposed pieces

Key Variations

Explore the most important branches and transpositions in the Italian Game.

Giuoco Piano (Rustig Spel)

Na 3...Lc5 4.c3 Pf6 5.d4 speelt Wit het Giuoco Piano. Deze lijn is momenteel een van de meest populaire in het eliteschaak en leidt tot rijke, evenwichtige posities.

Giuoco Pianissimo

Met 4.d3 (in plaats van 4.c3) kiest Wit voor een langzamere maar solidere opstelling. Het Giuoco Pianissimo is een favoriet van Magnus Carlsen en leidt tot lange manoeuvergevechten.

Twee Paarden Verdediging

Na 3...Pf6 beschermt Zwart e5 niet onmiddellijk en antwoordt met ...Pf6. Dit is een van de meest agressieve tegenwerpingen beschikbaar voor Zwart.

Hongaarse Variant

3...Le7 is de Hongaarse Variant, een solide maar passieve verdediging. Zwart vermijdt complicaties maar geeft Wit een licht ontwikkelingsvoordeel.

Loperopening

Als Wit 2.Lc4 speelt in plaats van 2.Pf3, krijgen we de Loperopening, die vaak transponeert naar Italiaanse lijnen.

Italian Gambit

1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Bc5 4.d4 exd4 5.c3 dxc3

White immediately challenges the center with 4.d4, offering a pawn sacrifice. If Black accepts with 5...dxc3 6.Nxc3, White has rapid development and open lines for attack. This gambit is less sound than the Evans but can surprise unprepared opponents. Black should probably decline with 4...exd4 5.c3 Nf6, transposing to Giuoco Piano lines.

Opening Statistics

Original research from 26,721 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
+6.3%
Favors BlackEqualFavors White

At 1200-1400

📊White's edge is +6.3% — White has a clear advantage at this level.

How This Opening Changes as You Improve

RatingGamesWhite's Edge
800-10004,747
+3.0%50 /0 /47
1000-12006,537
+6.3%52 /0 /45
1200-14006,170
+6.3%52 /0 /45
1400-16005,138
+3.1%50 /0 /47
1600-18004,129
+6.7%52 /0 /45

Based on 26,721 games · Updated March 2026

Why Play the Italian Game?

Solide en Actief

Het Italiaans Spel biedt Wit solide en actieve ontwikkeling. De loper op c4 zet onmiddellijk druk op f7, het zwakste punt van Zwart in het begin. Deze druk dwingt Zwart vroeg voorzichtig te spelen.

Positionele Flexibiliteit

Het Italiaans kan leiden tot zowel agressieve aanvallen als diep positioneel spel. Wit kan kiezen tussen het Evans Gambiet, Giuoco Piano, of Twee Paarden Verdediging afhankelijk van zijn stijl.

Enorme Theoretische Basis

Eeuwen van meesterspelers hebben het Italiaans geanalyseerd, wat heeft geresulteerd in een enorme kennisbasis. Voor spelers die klassieke principes willen leren, is er geen betere opening.

Gebruikt door de Besten

Van Ruy Lopez en Greco tot Magnus Carlsen en Fabiano Caruana — het Italiaans Spel is gebruikt door de beste spelers aller tijden. Het is een volledig respectabele opening op elk niveau.

Common Traps

Watch out for these dangerous tactical pitfalls

Fried Liver Val

In de Twee Paarden Verdediging kan Wit 4.Pg5 spelen om f7 direct te bedreigen. Na 4...d5 5.exd5, als Zwart 5...Pa5 speelt in plaats van 5...Pd4, kan Wit het paard offeren met 6.Lxf7+! Kxf7 7.Dh5+ met een verwoestende aanval.

Eenvoudige Italiaanse Val

Als Zwart de positie van de loper op c4 niet opmerkt en routinematige ontwikkelingszetten speelt zonder de dreiging op f7 te behandelen, kan Wit uitbuiten met Pxe5 of vergelijkbare tactiek.

Blackburne Shilling Trap

1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Nd4?! 4.Nxe5? Qg5! 5.Nxf7? Qxg2 6.Rf1 Qxe4+ 7.Be2 Nf3#

Black's strange 3...Nd4 looks like a mistake, but it sets a devious trap. If White greedily captures 4.Nxe5 Qg5!, threatening the g2 pawn and the knight, White is already in trouble. The "Shilling Gambit" costs White dearly - continuing with 5.Nxf7 leads to 7...Nf3#, a checkmate! White should play 4.Nxd4 or simply develop normally with 4.d3. Named after master Blackburne who supposedly won many beers using this trap.

Noah's Ark Trap - Italian Version

1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Nf6 4.Ng5 d5 5.exd5 Nd4 6.c3 b5! 7.Bf1 Nxd5 8.cxd4 Qxg5

In the Two Knights Defense, if White doesn't play accurately, Black can trap the bishop with ...b5. The coordinated ...Nd4 and ...b5 attack wins the bishop on c4, as it has no safe retreat square. After 8...Qxg5, Black has won the g5 knight or will win the bishop. White must avoid this by playing 7.Bb3 instead of allowing the bishop to be trapped. This pattern teaches the importance of keeping retreat squares for your pieces.

Beginner Tips

💡

Het Italiaans is de perfecte opening voor beginners — leer hier de klassieke principes

💡

Onthoud dat de loper op c4 f7 bedreigt — gebruik die druk actief

💡

Bestudeer zowel het Giuoco Piano als de Twee Paarden Verdediging

💡

Leer de Fried Liver Val — het is een van de beroemdste in het schaken

💡

Oefen het Giuoco Pianissimo voor rustigere, positionelere posities

💡

Avoid the Fried Liver Attack as Black by playing 5...Na5 instead of 5...Nxd5 in the Two Knights

💡

As White, if you're not sure what to do, remember: develop pieces, control the center, and castle

💡

Study classic games by Morphy in the Italian Game to understand the tactical patterns and proper piece coordination

Common Italian Game patterns we detect

We automatically check if you fall for these specific traps.

About the Italian Game

The Italian Game (1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4) is one of the oldest and most classical chess openings. It focuses on rapid development, center control, and targeting the vulnerable f7 square.

We analyze your piece coordination in the Italian structures, timing of central breaks, and attacking patterns against the f7 square. We identify missed tactical opportunities and overextensions.

openings.page.sections.keyThemes

Actieve ontwikkelingDruk op f7Centrale controlePositioneel en tactisch spelEeuwenlang getest

openings.page.sections.notablePlayers

Paul MorphyGioachino GrecoViswanathan AnandFabiano Caruana

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Italian Game analysis

The Italian Game arises after 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4. White's third move places the bishop on its most active diagonal, targeting the vulnerable f7 pawn — which is defended only by the king. This immediately creates pressure and forces Black to make a structural decision. The setup is one of the oldest in recorded chess, documented by Gioachino Greco in the early 17th century.
While 3. Bb5 (Ruy Lopez) applies indirect pressure on e5 via the pinned c6 knight, 3. Bc4 directly targets the f7 square — the weakest point in Black's initial position, defended only by the king. The Italian Game prioritises rapid development and immediate tactical threats over the Ruy Lopez's long-term positional pressure. Bc4 also enables the Evans Gambit (4. b4!?) and the aggressive Two Knights with Ng5.
The Giuoco Piano is the main classical line. After 3...Bc5 4. c3, White prepares d4 to build a strong pawn centre. The critical continuation is 4...Nf6 5. d4 exd4 6. cxd4 Bb4+ 7. Bd2, leading to rich strategic positions. Modern grandmasters like Caruana and Anand have revived this line, showing that it offers genuine winning chances at the elite level despite its quiet reputation.
The Evans Gambit sacrifices the b-pawn with 4. b4 to deflect Black's bishop and dramatically accelerate White's development. After 4...Bxb4 5. c3 Ba5 6. d4, White has a massive pawn centre and all pieces ready to activate. The gambit creates enormous practical pressure at club level. Named after Welsh sea captain William Davies Evans who introduced it in the 1820s.
In the Two Knights Defense, after 4. Ng5 d5 5. exd5, if Black plays the greedy 5...Nxd5??, White sacrifices the knight with 6. Nxf7!, forcing the Black king into the open. After 7. Qf3+, White has a ferocious attack worth more than the piece. Black must instead play the correct 5...Na5, attacking the bishop and maintaining a playable position.
Legal's Mate is one of chess's most celebrated tactical patterns: after 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 d6 4. Nc3 Bg4 5. Nxe5!, if Black greedily takes the queen with 5...Bxd1??, White delivers checkmate in two moves — 6. Bxf7+ Ke7 7. Nd5#. Named after French player Kermur de Legal, this is one of the oldest recorded checkmate patterns.
The 1858 Paris Opera Game (Morphy vs Duke of Brunswick and Count Isouard) featured 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 d6 with Bc4 appearing on move 6 — a Philidor Defense that Morphy steered into open Italian-style positions via rapid development. Morphy sacrificed a knight on b5, then a rook on d7, and finally crowned the combination with a stunning queen sacrifice — 16. Qb8+! Nxb8 17. Rd8# — illustrating that underdeveloped pieces cannot defend against coordinated piece activity regardless of material. The game's Italian principles (rapid development, open lines, f7 pressure) have made it the most studied miniature in chess history.

Famous Games

GrecovsAmateur
Europe 16201-0

One of the earliest recorded brilliant games in the Italian Game. Gioachino Greco, known as "Il Calabrese," demonstrated a spectacular queen sacrifice leading to checkmate. This game showcases the tactical richness of the Italian Game and helped popularize the opening in the 17th century. Greco's games were instrumental in developing early chess theory.

MorphyvsDuke of Brunswick and Count Isouard
Paris Opera 18581-0

Perhaps the most famous chess game ever played, known as the "Opera Game." Paul Morphy demonstrated brilliant sacrificial play in the Italian Game, culminating in a spectacular checkmate. The game exemplifies perfect tactical execution and piece coordination, teaching timeless lessons about rapid development and exploitation of underdeveloped positions.

AnandvsBologan
Dortmund 20031-0

A modern masterpiece in the Giuoco Piano. Viswanathan Anand demonstrated that the ancient Italian Game remains viable at the highest level with fresh ideas and deep preparation. His strategic pawn sacrifice and subsequent attack showed the opening's continued relevance in the 21st century, inspiring a revival of interest in these classical lines.

CaruanavsKarjakin
Candidates Tournament 20181-0

Fabiano Caruana employed the Giuoco Piano in the crucial Candidates Tournament, proving its soundness at the absolute elite level. His positional squeeze demonstrated modern understanding of the opening's strategic nuances. This game was part of Caruana's tournament victory and his qualification to challenge Magnus Carlsen for the World Championship.

Learning Resources

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