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Budapest Gambit report from your own games

Budapest Gambit report from your own games

Sharp and tactical. Discover if your Budapest traps work.

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Sample Report

Budapest Gambit Report

26 GAMESSample Data
Win Rate
50%

Performance vs Other Openings

Budapest Gambit50% Win
Other Openings44% Win

Key Insights

Piece Activity vs Pawn Structure
black
High Impact

Piece Activity Advantage Traded Away Too Quickly in 62% of Games

What this means
In 16 of your 26 Budapest Gambit games, you traded your active pieces (especially knights on e5 or c5) for White's passive pieces before establishing sufficient compensation. The Budapest sacrifices a pawn for piece activity — your knight on e5 and bishop pair create tactical pressure. When you maintain active pieces into the middlegame (past move 15), your win rate is 67%. When you trade them off early, it drops to 33%.
How to improve
Keep your active pieces on the board, especially the knight that reaches e5 or c5 after ...Ng4-e5. This knight is your pride — do not exchange it unless White pays a significant positional price. Pair the knight with ...Bb4+ pinning White's knight on c3, or ...Bc5 targeting f2. The bishop pair in open positions gives you long-term compensation even if you do not recover the pawn immediately. Only trade pieces when it leads to a concrete tactical advantage or when you can recover the pawn with an improved position.
#piece-activity#knight-outpost#trade-discipline
Knight Outposts
black
High Impact

Knight Outpost on e5 Maintained Past Move 12 in Only 31% of Games

What this means
In only 8 of 26 games did your knight remain on the e5 outpost past move 12. White drove it away with f4 or d3-f3 in most games, and in those cases your compensation vanished quickly. The knight on e5 controls c4, d3, f3, and g4 — it is the centerpiece of Black's strategy. Losing this outpost without adequate compensation is the main reason for your Budapest losses.
How to improve
Fortify the e5 knight. After ...Ng4-e5, support it with ...d6 (controlling e5 with a pawn), ...Nc6 (adding piece support), and ...Bf5 (controlling the e4 square to prevent White's e4 which supports f3 to kick the knight). If White plays f4 to drive the knight away, retreat to g6 or c6 where it remains active. In the Fajarowicz Variation (...Ne4 instead of ...Ng4), the knight aims for d6 or c5 instead — but the principle is the same: plant a knight on an outpost and defend it. Consider ...Bb4+ before ...d6 to disrupt White's ability to consolidate.
#knight-outpost#e5-control#piece-support
Counterattack Timing

Counterattacks Launched 4 Moves Too Late After White Consolidates

What this means
Engine analysis across your Budapest games shows that optimal counterattacking moments (with ...d5, ...c5, or tactical strikes) occur around moves 8-11, but you typically execute them around moves 12-15. By that point, White has consolidated the extra pawn and completed development, making counterattacks less effective. In 7 games where you struck before move 11, you won 5. In 12 games where you waited past move 13, you won only 4.
How to improve
The Budapest Gambit demands immediate counterplay. After recovering the initial initiative with ...Ng4-e5 (or ...Ne4 in the Fajarowicz), strike in the center within 2-3 moves. Play ...d6 followed by ...c5 to challenge White's d4 pawn directly. If White plays e3, respond with ...d5 to open the center while your pieces are more active. In the Rubinstein Variation, the ...c5 break is especially effective since White's pawn on d4 is only supported by the c2 pawn. The key timing window is moves 8-11 — after that, White's extra pawn starts to tell.
#counterattack-timing#central-breaks#initiative

Top Variations

1
Fajarowicz Variation
10 games
2
Rubinstein Variation
9 games
3
Adler Variation
7 games

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What we analyze in your Budapest Gambit games

Your tactical trap success rate

Your handling of the Fajarowicz Variation

Your piece activity compensation

Your accuracy in sharp variations

Your results when the gambit is declined

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, establishing central control. Black develops the knight to f6, a flexible move preparing to contest the center and keeping options open for various defenses.

Opponent is playing…
1.d4Nf62.c4e53.dxe5Ng44.Bf4Nc65.Nf3Bb4+6.Nbd2Qe77.a3Ngxe58.axb4Nxf3+

Key Positions to Know

Critical concepts every Budapest Gambit player should understand

The ...e5 Counter-Gambit

After 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e5, Black immediately sacrifices a pawn to shatter White's central control. This bold strike challenges the d4 pawn before White can consolidate and leads to sharp, unbalanced positions where Black's piece activity compensates for the material.

The Fajarowicz ...Ne4

In the Fajarowicz Variation, after 2...e5 3.dxe5, Black plays ...Ne4 instead of the standard ...Ng4. This knight leap creates immediate tactical threats against c3 and f2, often catching unprepared opponents off-guard with tricky complications.

Rapid Development Compensation

After recovering the pawn or accepting the gambit, Black accelerates development with ...Bc5, ...Nc6, and quick castling. The combination of active minor pieces and open lines gives Black dynamic compensation that is difficult for White to neutralize without precise play.

Strategic Plans

White's Plans

  • Manter o peão e5 pelo maior tempo possível
  • Completar o desenvolvimento rapidamente com Cf3 e Af4
  • Roclar do lado do rei para segurança
  • Trocar peças quando estiver com material a mais
  • Cuidar das combinações táticas em f2 e no peão e5
  • No final, o peão extra deve ser decisivo
  • Avoid weakening moves like g3 or f3 that create targets for Black's pieces

Black's Plans

  • Recuperar o peão em e5 com ...Cg4 e ...Cgxe5
  • Desenvolver rapidamente com ...Cc6, ...Ab4+, ...De7
  • Criar ameaças táticas contra f2, e5 e as peças expostas do Branco
  • Manter o jogo ativo de peças e o controlo central
  • Procurar táticas envolvendo ...Cxf2 ou ...Axd2+
  • Não obsessionar com recuperar o peão — a atividade das peças é mais importante
  • Don't obsess over regaining the pawn - piece activity is more important
  • Create threats faster than White can consolidate the position

Key Variations

Explore the most important branches and transpositions in the Budapest Gambit.

Variante Adler

A linha principal onde o Branco mantém o par de bispos após axb4. Após 9...Axd2+ 10.Dxd2 d6, o Preto recuperou o peão com peças ativas. A posição é aproximadamente igual com chances para ambos os lados.

Variante Fajarowicz

O Fajarowicz é a opção mais afiada do Preto, oferecendo o cavalo em vez de recuperar o peão imediatamente. Após 4.a3 4...b6, o Preto fianqueta o bispo e cria compensação posicional de longo prazo.

Variante Alekhine

O Branco fortifica o peão e5 com o avanço e4, construindo um forte centro de peões. Após 4...Cxe5 5.f4 Cec6, o Branco tem um centro poderoso mas o Preto tem desenvolvimento rápido.

Recusado - 3.Cf3

O Branco recusa o gambito, desenvolvendo em vez de capturar o peão. Após 3...e4 4.Cg5, o Branco evitou as linhas principais do Budapeste mas deu espaço central ao Preto.

Opening Statistics

Original research from 316 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
+17.6%
Favors BlackEqualFavors White

At 1200-1400

📊White's edge is +17.6% — White has a clear advantage at this level.

How This Opening Changes as You Improve

RatingGamesWhite's Edge
800-10009
+44.5%67 /0 /22
1000-120019
+5.3%47 /0 /42
1200-140051
+17.6%59 /0 /41
1400-160075
-18.7%40 /0 /59
1600-1800162
-1.2%49 /0 /50

Based on 316 games · Updated March 2026

Why Play the Budapest Gambit?

Valor de Surpresa

O Gambito de Budapeste raramente é visto no nível de clube, pegando os adversários totalmente de surpresa. A maioria dos jogadores de 1.d4 estuda o Gambito da Dama e o Indiano do Rei, mas poucos estudam o Budapeste. Esse fator surpresa dá ao Preto chances práticas enquanto o Branco precisa resolver problemas difíceis sobre o tabuleiro.

Complicações Táticas

O Budapeste cria imediatamente complicações táticas com ...Cg4 atacando e5 e f2, e ...Ab4+ adicionando pressão. O Preto consegue desenvolvimento rápido e jogo ativo em troca do sacrifício temporário de peão. As posições são afiadas e requerem cálculo preciso de ambos os lados.

Desenvolvimento Rápido

Após sacrificar o peão, o Preto obtém desenvolvimento rápido com ...Cg4, ...Cc6, ...Ab4+, e ...De7. Todas as peças do Preto coordenam em direção ao centro e ao rei do Branco, criando ameaças imediatas.

Eficácia Prática

Apesar de ser teoricamente questionável, o Budapeste pontua bem na prática porque o Branco deve defender com precisão. Muitos jogadores aceitam o gambito esperando um peão extra fácil, apenas para se encontrarem sob pressão.

Common Traps

Watch out for these dangerous tactical pitfalls

Armadilha Kieninger

O Branco ataca o bispo que faz xeque com 7.a3, mas o Preto ignora e recaptura o peão central com 7...Cgxe5. Se o Branco capturar o bispo com 8.axb4??, o Preto dá xeque-mate com 8...Cd3# porque o peão e2 está travado pela dama em e7.

Beginner Tips

💡

Estude bem as linhas principais antes de explorar variantes

💡

Compreenda as rupturas de peões e quando executá-las

💡

Preste atenção ao posicionamento e coordenação das peças

💡

Não se apresse — desenvolva sistematicamente

💡

Aprenda os planos típicos do médio-jogo

💡

Estude partidas de mestres nesta abertura

💡

Pratique as estruturas de peões resultantes

💡

Seja paciente — esta abertura recompensa a compreensão

Common Budapest Gambit patterns we detect

We automatically check if you fall for these specific traps.

About the Budapest Gambit

The Budapest Gambit (1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e5) is a sharp tactical gambit where Black sacrifices a pawn for rapid development and attacking chances.

We analyze your tactical accuracy, trap success, and compensation maintenance. We identify where theory knowledge or calculation fails you.

openings.page.sections.keyThemes

Sacrifício precoce de peãoDesenvolvimento rápidoIniciativaCombinações táticasArma surpresaPeças ativas

openings.page.sections.notablePlayers

AdlerSchlechterFajarowiczTartakower

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Budapest Gambit analysis

The Budapest Gambit (1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e5) is a sharp tactical gambit where Black sacrifices a pawn for rapid development and attacking chances.
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We analyze your tactical accuracy, trap success, and compensation maintenance. We identify where theory knowledge or calculation fails you.
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Use Kingsights to identify your specific weaknesses in the Budapest Gambit. 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

SteinervsCapablanca
Budapest 19280-1

World Champion Jose Raul Capablanca employed the Budapest Gambit against Herman Steiner in the tournament where the gambit got its name. Capablanca's brilliant tactical play and deep understanding of the compensation demonstrated that even the greatest positional player of his era appreciated the gambit's dynamic potential.

EuwevsSpielmann
Vienna 19350-1

Rudolf Spielmann defeated future World Champion Max Euwe with a brilliant Budapest Gambit. Spielmann's aggressive piece play and tactical alertness overwhelmed Euwe's defenses, showing that the gambit offered practical chances even against world-class opposition. This game helped establish the Budapest as a legitimate aggressive weapon.

SpasskyvsZaitsev
Riga 19640-1

Future World Champion Boris Spassky was defeated by the Budapest Gambit, demonstrating its practical dangers. Zaitsev's energetic play and tactical threats gave Spassky no time to consolidate his extra pawn. This game showed that even elite players could be caught unprepared by the Budapest's sharp tactics.

AbramovicvsBasman
Hastings 19720-1

Michael Basman, a Budapest Gambit specialist, delivered a spectacular attacking victory featuring multiple piece sacrifices. The game showcased the tactical richness of the Budapest and demonstrated that when Black's attack succeeds, it can be devastating. Basman's creative play inspired a generation of Budapest players.

Learning Resources

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