Playing 2.Qh5? Find out how often Scholar's Mate really works — and how often it backfires.
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Your Scholar's Mate success rate
Your win rate when the attack is refuted
Your queen retreat plan when challenged
Your piece activity after the queen retreats
Your positional understanding in the resulting positions
Play through the main line move by move
The open game. Both sides fight for the center and the position immediately becomes dynamic. The Wayward Queen Attack arises after White plays the surprising 2.Qh5.
Critical concepts every Wayward Queen Attack player should understand
With 2.Qh5, White creates an immediate threat of 3.Qxf7# — Scholar's Mate. Black must respond precisely with 2...Nc6 (or 2...g6) to defend f7. The trick is that many beginners don't know the correct refutation and fall for it in practice.
After 2...Nc6, the Scholar's Mate threat is over. Now if 3.Bc4, Black plays 3...g6 and the queen must retreat. White loses tempo and Black develops normally. The key lesson: developing with tempo (Nc6 attacks nothing, g6 attacks the queen) is the correct way to refute the Wayward Queen.
After the queen is challenged, White must retreat — either to f3, e2, or h4. Each retreat leads to different positions. From f3, White can still eye f7 and support a potential Nc3-d5 plan. The important thing is that White is already behind in development.
Explore the most important branches and transpositions in the Wayward Queen Attack.
Czarne bronią się poprawnie przez 2...Sf6, atakujac hetmana i nie dając sie zlowic. Po 3.Hxe5+ Ge7 lub 3.Hh4 d5, pozycja Czarnych jest zdrowa.
Po 2...Sc6? 3.Gc4, Biale zagrazaja Hxf7#. Jesli Czarne nie odpowiedza precyzyjnie, gra jest szybko przegrana.
Czarne gra ...g6 by atakowac hetmana. Po 3.Hf3, hetman moze byc aktywny, ale Biale moga latwiej rozwinac figury.
Czarne graja pasywnie jak ...Ge7 lub ...d6. Biale moga skonsolidowac i grac normalnie, ale element zaskoczenia jest utracony.
1.e4 e5 2.Qh5 Nc6 3.Bc4 g6 4.Qf3 Nf6 5.Ne2 Nd4 6.Qd3 Ne6
After the principled refutation, Black's best plan involves ...Nd4 to attack the queen, then ...Ne6 to complete development. White's queen makes a third move with Qd3, while Black develops freely. After ...Bc5, ...O-O, and ...d6, Black has a completely normal and comfortable position with White slightly behind in development.
Original research from 5,740 real amateur games — data you won't find anywhere else.
📊White's edge is +4.2% — a slight advantage for White.
| Rating | Games | White's Edge |
|---|---|---|
| 800-1000 | 2,753 | +3.5%50 /0 /46 |
| 1000-1200 | 1,660 | +10.0%53 /0 /43 |
| 1200-1400 | 828 | +4.2%50 /0 /46 |
| 1400-1600 | 357 | +8.2%53 /0 /45 |
| 1600-1800 | 142 | +4.2%51 /0 /47 |
Based on 5,740 games · Updated March 2026
Atak Bladej Krolowej jest jednym z najbardziej zaskakujacych otwarc. Wyjscie hetmana na h5 jest nieoczekiwane i moze zaskoczyc nawet doswiadczonych graczy.
Glowna idea to pulapka matowa przez Hxe5+! i Hxh8 lub inne szybkie wygrywanie materialu. Jesli Czarne nie znaja obrony, moga wpasc w pulapke juz w 3-4 ruchu.
Atak Bladej Krolowej jest popularny wsrod poczatkujacych i na poziomie club, gdzie wielu graczy nie zna odpowiedniej obrony. Moze generowac latwe wygrane.
Nawet jesli nie uzywasz tego otwarcia, znajomosc Ataku Bladej Krolowej uczy ogolnych zasad szachowej taktyki i pulapek.
Watch out for these dangerous tactical pitfalls
Po 2.Hh5 Sc6? 3.Gc4 g6?, Biale graj 4.Hxf7#! To slynna pulapka (Scholar's Mate style) gdzie poczatkujacy Czarne przegrywaja w 4 ruchach.
1. e4 e5 2. Qh5 Nc6 3. Bc4 Bc5 4. Qxf7+
If Black develops the bishop but forgets that f7 still needs defending, White can win immediately. After 4.Qxf7+! Kxf7 5.Bxg8+ Kf6 6.Bxh7, White has won two pieces for the queen and keeps a material advantage. Black should have played 3...g6 instead of immediately developing the bishop.
1. e4 e5 2. Qh5 Nc6 3. Bc4 g6 4. Qf3 Nf6 5. Qb3 Nd4 6. Bxf7+ Ke7 7. Qd3 Nxc2+
When White plays the greedy 5.Qb3 (threatening both f7 and b7), Black plays 5...Nd4! After 6.Bxf7+ Ke7 7.Qd3, Black wins decisively with 7...Nxc2+ forking the king and queen. This trap shows the danger of White becoming too aggressive with the Wayward Queen.
1. e4 e5 2. Qh5 Nc6 3. Bc4 Qe7 4. Qxe5 Nxe5 5. Bxf7+ Nxf7
After 3...Qe7!, if White greedily plays 4.Qxe5?? Black answers 4...Nxe5 5.Bxf7+ Nxf7 — and White has given up the queen for just a bishop. The queen sacrifice backfires spectacularly. This line shows that overconfident Wayward Queen play gets punished harshly by principled defense.
Jako Biale: uzywaj tylko dla zabawy lub niespodzianki — to nie jest seriozne otwarcie
Jako Czarne: zawsze graj ...Sf6 — to jedyna poprawna odpowiedz
Naucz sie jak bronic sie — wszyscy poczatkujacy to widza!
Po ...Sf6, graj aktywnie i ignoruj hetmana na h5
Slynny Scholar's Mate (mat szkolny) jest zwiazany z Atakiem Bladej Krolowej — poznaj go dobrze
Study why Scholar's Mate fails when Black plays correctly — understanding the refutation makes you better at both sides.
The Wayward Queen is useful for teaching beginners about king safety and piece coordination, but don't make it your main weapon.
If you find yourself playing against the Wayward Queen regularly, learn the Qe7! move (not g6) as your main response — it's sharper and more punishing.
We automatically check if you fall for these specific traps.
Moving your queen too early often leads to trouble.
The Wayward Queen Attack (1.e4 e5 2.Qh5) is one of the most common openings at beginner and intermediate levels. White immediately threatens Scholar's Mate on f7. While easily refuted by 2...Nc6, the Queen on h5 often creates practical difficulties for unprepared opponents.
We track your Scholar's Mate attempts, refutation rates, and your ability to maintain pressure when the early queen thrust doesn't work immediately.
Common questions about Wayward Queen Attack analysis
The Scholar's Mate remains one of the most-played checkmates in chess history, occurring millions of times daily in online chess platforms. The Wayward Queen Attack is the most direct route to it. While not a 'famous game' in the traditional sense, the Scholar's Mate is arguably the most known checkmate pattern in the history of the game.
IM Eric Rosen has played numerous Wayward Queen Attack games in bullet chess, often demonstrating both the effectiveness of the Scholar's Mate threat and the correct way to continue when the opponent defends accurately. His commentary on these games has taught thousands of players the key refutations.
Grandmaster John Nunn, in his famous book on chess tactics, discussed using Scholar's Mate threats as teaching tools. In simultaneous exhibitions against amateur players, the Wayward Queen proved devastatingly effective — demonstrating that even moves violating opening principles work when opponents don't know the correct refutation.
Nakamura famously deployed the Scholar's Mate attempt in bullet chess games against titled players, demonstrating that even strong players can spend precious time calculating the refutation in fast games. The psychological shock of 2.Qh5 can cost vital seconds even when the opponent knows the theory.
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