Kingsights Logo
Queen's Gambit report from your own games

Queen's Gambit report from your own games

Are you actually controlling the center, or just giving up pawns? We scan your real games to find where your QG strategy breaks down.

Free • Instant Analysis • Works with any Chess.com username

Sample Report Preview

Here's what a personalized Queen's Gambit analysis looks like

Sample Report

Queen's Gambit Report

45 GAMESSample Data
Win Rate
49%

Performance vs Other Openings

Queen's Gambit49% Win
Other Openings51% Win

Key Insights

Variation Strength

You Excel in the Slav Defense Structures, Scoring 58% Win Rate

What this means
Your Slav Defense games show a 58% win rate, significantly above your overall 49% in the Queen's Gambit complex. You handle the ...c6/...Bf5 development scheme well, with accurate pawn breaks and solid endgame technique. This is your most reliable Queen's Gambit variation.
How to improve
Consider steering more games toward Slav structures when possible. As Black, play ...c6 early to enter your comfort zone. Your strength in the Slav comes from good light-squared bishop development — apply the same principle in other QG variations where the bishop often stays passive.
#slav-defense#strength#development
Central Control
black
High Impact

In the QGA, You Give Up the Center Too Easily After ...dxc4

What this means
In 8 Queen's Gambit Accepted games, you failed to challenge the center with ...c5 or ...e5 after taking on c4 in 6 of them. Without a central counter, White builds a dominant e4/d4 center and your pieces get cramped. Your win rate when you play a central counter is 67% vs 17% without one.
How to improve
After ...dxc4, you must follow up with a central challenge within 3-4 moves. The standard plans are: (1) ...c5 to attack d4 directly, (2) ...e6 followed by ...c5, or (3) ...a6 and ...b5 to hold the c4 pawn while preparing ...c5. Never accept the gambit and then play passively — the whole point of taking on c4 is to create counterplay, not to hold a pawn.
#qga#center-control#counterplay
Strategic Pattern
white

Your Win Rate with the Minority Attack Plan is 60%

What this means
When you execute the minority attack (b4-b5 against Black's c6/d5 structure), you win 60% of the time. You correctly identify the plan in most QGD positions but sometimes delay b4 too long, giving Black time to organize counterplay on the kingside.
How to improve
In the QGD Exchange Variation, start the minority attack immediately with a3 and b4. The ideal timing is b4 by move 12-14. Don't wait for full development — the minority attack is time-sensitive. After b5, aim for bxc6 to create a weak isolated pawn on c6 or a backward pawn on b7 that you can target for the rest of the game.
#minority-attack#qgd#pawn-structure

Top Variations

1
Declined (QGD)
25 games
2
Slav Defense
12 games
3
Accepted (QGA)
8 games

Enter your Chess.com username to see your personalized report

What we analyze in your Queen's Gambit games

Your handling of the Isolated Queen's Pawn (IQP) positions

Your execution of the Minority Attack in Carlsbad structures

Your timing of the e3/e4 central breaks vs. the Semi-Slav

Your win rate when Black accepts the gambit (QGA)

Learn This Opening

Play through the main line move by move

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

White opens with the queen pawn, staking a claim to the center. Black responds symmetrically, occupying the center and preparing to contest White's control. This is the starting position of all Queen's Gambit variations.

Play pawn to d4 (d4)
Drag a piece or tap to move
1.d4d52.c4e63.Nc3Nf64.Bg5Be75.e3O-O6.Nf3Nbd77.Rc1c68.Bd3dxc4

Key Positions to Know

Critical concepts every Queen's Gambit player should understand

The Gambit Pawn

With 2.c4, White challenges Black's d5 pawn immediately. Black must choose: accept the gambit, decline with ...e6, or enter the Slav with ...c6. Each choice leads to fundamentally different pawn structures and plans.

The Isolated Queen's Pawn

After pawn exchanges, White often gets an isolated d4 pawn. This pawn is a weakness in the endgame but a strength in the middlegame — it controls e5 and c5, supports piece activity, and enables attacking chances.

The Minority Attack

In the Exchange Variation (Carlsbad structure), White pushes a2-a4-b4-b5 to attack Black's queenside pawn majority. This creates lasting weaknesses on c6 or a backward c-pawn that White can target for the rest of the game.

Strategic Plans

White's Plans

  • Utrzymywać centralną kontrolę przez piony d4 i e4
  • Atakować skrzydle hetmańskim przez c5 i a4-a5
  • Rozwijać aktywnie gońca na c1 i c4 w odpowiednich wariantach
  • Naciskać na centrum Czarnych i szukać słabości
  • Exchange dark-squared bishops to exploit weaknesses on dark squares
  • Develop rooks to c1 and e1, supporting central and queenside operations
  • Create pressure down the c-file after cxd5 or in positions where Black plays ...dxc4

Black's Plans

  • Utrzymywać solidną centralną fortecę z pionem d5
  • Szukać aktywnego kontrataku przez ...c5 lub ...e5 we właściwym czasie
  • Używać aktywności figur by kompensować statyczną pozycję pionkową
  • Unikać zbyt pasywnej gry i szukać wymian figur
  • Control key central squares (e4, d5) with pieces, especially knights
  • In QGD structures, prepare the minority attack defense or queenside counterplay
  • Trade light-squared bishops to reduce White's attacking potential on the kingside

Key Variations

Explore the most important branches and transpositions in the Queen's Gambit.

Przyjęty Gambit Hetmański (2...dxc4)

Czarne przyjmują pion. Białe zazwyczaj odgrywają go przez e4 lub Gxc4, uzyskując centrum i aktywne figury jako kompensatę.

Odrzucony Gambit Hetmański (2...e6)

Czarne odrzucają gambit i budują solidną fortecę. Gra jest strategiczna i wymaga głębokiej wiedzy manewrowej.

Obrona Słowiańska (2...c6)

Solidna i popularna obrona, w której Czarne utrzymują pion d5 i szukają aktywnego kontrataku.

Obrona Tarrascha (2...e5)

Agresywna odpowiedź tworząca izolowany dandant dla Czarnych, z kontrszansami i dynamiką jako wynagrodzenie.

Chigorin Defense

1.d4 d5 2.c4 Nc6 3.Nf3 Bg4 4.cxd5 Bxf3 5.gxf3 Qxd5 6.e3 e5

An unorthodox but dangerous system where Black develops the knight to c6 instead of the standard squares. Named after Russian master Mikhail Chigorin, this line gives Black active piece play at the cost of slightly unusual development. White gets doubled f-pawns but strong central control. The positions are double-edged and less explored theoretically, offering practical chances. Alexander Morozevich championed this defense at the elite level.

Albin Counter-Gambit

1.d4 d5 2.c4 e5 3.dxe5 d4 4.Nf3 Nc6 5.Nbd2 Bf5

A sharp counter-gambit where Black sacrifices a pawn for rapid development and attacking chances. After 3.dxe5 d4, Black's advanced d-pawn cramps White's position. If White plays carelessly, Black can develop a dangerous initiative with ...Bf5, ...Qe7, ...O-O-O. However, with accurate play, White should obtain an advantage due to the extra pawn. This is an excellent surprise weapon at club level where opponents may be unprepared for the tactical complications.

Opening Statistics

Original research from 14,745 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
+5.2%
Favors BlackEqualFavors White

At 1200-1400

📊White's edge is +5.2% — White has a clear advantage at this level.

How This Opening Changes as You Improve

RatingGamesWhite's Edge
800-10001,666
+11.6%55 /0 /43
1000-12002,742
+12.9%55 /0 /42
1200-14003,087
+5.2%51 /0 /46
1400-16003,482
+11.6%54 /0 /43
1600-18003,768
+10.0%53 /0 /43

Based on 14,745 games · Updated March 2026

Why Play the Queen's Gambit?

Klasyczne i solidne

Gambit Hetmański to jeden z filarów szachowej teorii. Białe zdobywają centralną kontrolę przez 2.c4, kwestionując pion d5 Czarnych i zyskując centralne panowanie.

Elastyczność transpose

Gambit Hetmański może transponować do dziesiątek różnych systemów zależnie od odpowiedzi Czarnych — Przyjęty Gambit Hetmański, Odrzucony, Słowiański, Kataońskie i wiele innych.

Sprawdzony przez mistrzów

Wszystkie wielkie mistrzowie od Lasker po Kasparow grali Gambit Hetmański. To otwarcie najwyższej klasy stosowane na wszystkich poziomach przez ponad sto lat.

Kontrola strategiczna

Główna idea to strategiczna inicjatywa — Białe dążą do silnej pozycji centralnej, zachowując przy tym zdrową strukturę pionkową.

Common Traps

Watch out for these dangerous tactical pitfalls

Pułapka Cambridgesprings

W Odrzuconym Gambicie Hetmańskim po 3.Sc3 Sf6 4.Gg5, jeśli Białe nie są precyzyjne po 4...Sbd7 5.e3 c6 6.Sf3 Ha5, Czarne mogą wygrać materiał przez ataki na gońca i skoczka.

Lasker Trap

1.d4 d5 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.Bg5 Be7 5.e3 O-O 6.Nf3 h6 7.Bh4 Ne4 8.Bxe7 Qxe7 9.cxd5 Nxc3 10.bxc3 exd5 11.Qb3 Rd8?? 12.c4!

This is a positional trap rather than a tactical one. After the seemingly natural 11...Rd8?, White plays 12.c4!, and Black's position collapses. The d5 pawn cannot be adequately defended, and White wins a pawn with a superior position. Black should play 11...Qb4+! forcing a queen trade and achieving equality.

Rubinstein Trap

1.d4 d5 2.Nf3 Nf6 3.c4 e6 4.Bg5 Nbd7 5.e3 Be7 6.Nc3 O-O 7.Rc1 Re8?? 8.cxd5! exd5 9.Nxd5!

Black's seemingly developing move 7...Re8 allows a devastating combination. After 8.cxd5! exd5 9.Nxd5! Nxd5 10.Bxe7 Nxe7 11.Rxc7, White has won a pawn with a dominant position. The rook on c7 is unstoppable, and Black's position is in ruins. Black should play 7...c6 instead, supporting the center.

QGA Trap - Premature Queen Sortie

1.d4 d5 2.c4 dxc4 3.Nf3 Nf6 4.e3 Bg4? 5.Bxc4 e6 6.Qb3! Bxf3 7.gxf3!

Black develops the bishop to g4 without proper preparation, and White's 6.Qb3! attacks both b7 and f7. After 6...Bxf3 7.gxf3!, White threatens Qxb7 and despite the doubled pawns, has a strong attack. If 7...Qc8, then 8.Nc3 with overwhelming pressure. Black should play 4...e6 or 4...c6 before developing the light-squared bishop.

Beginner Tips

💡

Gambit Hetmański to fundamentalne otwarcie — warto opanować w detalach

💡

Naucz się co najmniej jednej linii Przyjętego i jednej Odrzuconego

💡

Zrozum temat walki o centrum — to klucz do GH

💡

Nie zapomnij o aktywności gonców — są kluczowe w tym otwarciu

💡

Studiuj klasyków — partie Capablanki, Petrosiana i Fischera z GH

💡

Understand the value of the dark-squared bishop - its exchange often determines whether kingside attacks succeed

💡

As White, be patient with the minority attack (b4-b5) - it's a slow but powerful strategic plan

💡

Practice endgames arising from the Queen's Gambit - many positions simplify to technical endgames where technique matters more than tactics

Common Queen's Gambit patterns we detect

We automatically check if you fall for these specific traps.

IQP Mismanagement

In Isolated Queen's Pawn positions, you struggle to maintain activity.

Stalled Minority Attack

In the Carlsbad structure, you rarely launch the minority attack (b4-b5).

About the Queen's Gambit

The Queen's Gambit (1. d4 d5 2. c4) is one of the most solid and ambitious ways to play for a win. It demands a flexible understanding of pawn structures—from the isolated queen's pawn to the Carlsbad structure.

We track your success with the Minority Attack, your handling of IQP positions, and your timing of central breaks. We specifically look for missed tactical opportunities in the Semi-Slav and over-extension in the Exchange Variation.

openings.page.sections.keyThemes

Walka o centrumSolidne strukturyStrategiczna głębiaKlasyczne otwarcieAktywna gra

openings.page.sections.notablePlayers

Alexander AlekhineMikhail BotvinnikGarry KasparovVladimir Kramnik

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Queen's Gambit analysis

The Queen's Gambit begins with 1. d4 d5 2. c4. White offers the c-pawn to undermine Black's central d5 pawn. Unlike a true gambit, Black cannot safely hold the pawn for long — if Black takes with 2...dxc4, White can recapture comfortably after 3. Nf3 Nf6 4. e3. More popular is declining with 2...e6 (Queen's Gambit Declined) or 2...c6 (Slav Defense), both maintaining a strong pawn centre.
The Queen's Gambit is not a true gambit in the classical sense. If Black accepts with 2...dxc4, White regains the pawn quickly and advantageously — for example, after 3. e3, the pawn on c4 becomes difficult to hold. Black would need to play ...b5 and ...a6, creating serious concessions on the queenside. Most strong players decline the gambit, as holding the c4 pawn long-term gives White too much activity for free.
After 1. d4 d5 2. c4, the Queen's Gambit Declined (QGD) is 2...e6 — Black supports the d5 pawn and aims for solid development. The Queen's Gambit Accepted (QGA) is 2...dxc4 — Black takes the pawn and aims to return it under favourable conditions while freeing the position. The QGD leads to more positional, manoeuvring games; the QGA creates open, dynamic positions where Black fights for equality with active piece play.
The Slav Defense (2...c6) supports d5 with the c-pawn rather than e6, crucially keeping the light-squared bishop free to develop outside the pawn chain. After 3. Nf3 Nf6 4. Nc3 dxc4 5. a4 Bf5, Black has active bishop play while maintaining solid central control. The Slav is one of Black's most reliable defences — sound enough for World Championship play while offering genuine winning chances.
The Semi-Slav combines both ...c6 and ...e6, accepting a tempo cost for a solid centre. The Botvinnik Variation (1. d4 d5 2. c4 c6 3. Nf3 Nf6 4. Nc3 e6 5. Bg5 dxc4 6. e4 b5 7. e5 h6 8. Bh4 g5) is one of the most complex and deeply analysed lines in all of chess theory. Black aggressively fights for the c4 pawn with ...b5 and then starts a tactical brawl on the kingside with ...g5. Both sides must know deep theory to survive.
The Elephant Trap occurs after 1. d4 d5 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 Nf6 4. Bg5 Nbd7 5. cxd5 exd5 6. Nxd5??. White greedily captures on d5, thinking the Bg5 protects against tactics. But after 6...Nxd5! 7. Bxd8 Bb4+!, White must block with the queen — and Black then takes the bishop. White loses material in all lines. The correct White move was 6. e3, developing normally and keeping the position balanced.
The Queen's Gambit produces positions that demand strategic planning over tactical calculation: pawn structure management (the minority attack, isolated queen pawns), long-term piece manoeuvring, and precise endgame technique. Botvinnik's famous defeat of Capablanca in the 1938 AVRO Tournament — a Queen's Gambit masterpiece featuring a perfectly executed minority attack — is the definitive example. Every World Champion from Lasker to Kramnik has used the Queen's Gambit as a primary weapon, cementing its status as the gold standard of strategic opening play.

Famous Games

BotvinnikvsCapablanca
AVRO 19381-0

One of the greatest positional games ever played. Botvinnik defeated the legendary Capablanca in a Queen's Gambit, demonstrating superior understanding of the Exchange Variation's minority attack. This game announced Botvinnik as a world championship contender and is studied in every chess school as a masterpiece of strategic planning.

AlekhinevsEuwe
World Championship 1937 (Game 14)1-0

Alekhine's brilliant strategic victory in the Queen's Gambit showcased his deep understanding of piece coordination. His knight maneuver to dominate the position and eventual breakthrough demonstrated the opening's strategic richness. This game helped Alekhine regain the World Championship title.

KramnikvsKasparov
World Championship Match 2000 (Game 2)1-0

The game that shocked the chess world. Kramnik used the Berlin Defense to the Queen's Gambit setup to dethrone Kasparov, ending his 15-year reign as World Champion. This game demonstrated the Queen's Gambit's relevance in modern chess and Kramnik's superior preparation in strategic positions.

KasparovvsAnand
World Championship 1995 (Game 10)1-0

A stunning tactical blow in a Semi-Slav Defense. Kasparov's 24.Rxd4! sacrifice led to a forced winning attack, showcasing that the Queen's Gambit can produce brilliant tactical fireworks despite its strategic reputation. This game is considered one of the best games of the 1990s.

Learning Resources

How valuable was this analysis?

Ready to master your openings?

Get a complete breakdown of your play across all openings, not just the Queen's Gambit.

No credit card required • Works with Chess.com