The wildest opening on the board. Find out if 1.g4 is a weapon or a blunder.
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Your success in creating chaos and surprise
Your Bg2 pressure utilization
Your win rate vs. unprepared opponents
Your compensation when refuted with best play
Your transition to playable middlegames
Play through the main line move by move
Grob's Attack! The most outrageous opening move in chess. White immediately moves the g-pawn two squares, violating every classical opening principle: no center control, immediate king exposure, and a weakened kingside. Despite this, 1.g4 has some genuine ideas: prepare Bg2 on the powerful diagonal and create chaotic positions where preparation is useless.
Critical concepts every Grob's Attack player should understand
With 1.g4, White immediately grabs kingside space — a move that violates every opening principle. The idea is to follow up with Bg2, h3, and d3, building a unique setup. Against unprepared opponents, the chaos this creates is worth more than the theoretical disadvantage.
After 1.g4 d5 2.Bg2, White's bishop controls the long diagonal h1-a8. Combined with h3 to prevent ...Bg4 pin, White builds a unique fortress. The plan is to play d3, Nd2 or Nc3, and eventually e4 to challenge Black's center from an unexpected angle.
The Grob's greatest weapon is psychological: most opponents don't know what to do and try to refute it immediately, creating unbalanced positions where White's preparation wins. The key is to understand your own setup better than your opponent understands it — position knowledge beats theory here.
Explore the most important branches and transpositions in the Grob's Attack.
Após 1.g4 d5 2.Ag2 Axg4 3.c4, o Branco testa o adversário imediatamente. Esta linha leva a posições complicadas onde a actividade das peças do Branco compensa a estrutura de peões defeituosa.
1.g4 d5 2.Ag2 Axg4 3.c4 c6 é uma das linhas mais complicadas. O Branco obtém jogo na coluna g e compensação pela estrutura enfraquecida.
O Preto pode tentar refutar o Grob com 1...d5 2.Ag2 c6 3.h3 e5, tomando espaço central imediatamente. Esta é a resposta mais principiada.
1.g4 d5 2.Ag2 c6 3.h3 e5 4.d3 é um tratamento conservador que mantém a posição fechada. O Branco evita complicações imediatas e desenvolve lentamente.
1.g4 c5 2.Bg2 Nc6 3.h3 d5 4.d3 e5 5.f4
Black plays the Sicilian defense move c5. White continues with the typical Grob setup but Black gets a Sicilian-like middlegame with extra space. After 5.f4, White tries to launch a direct kingside attack, but Black's better-developed position should provide excellent counterplay with ...d4 or ...f5 breaks.
Original research from 1,870 real amateur games — data you won't find anywhere else.
📊White's edge is +3.2% — a slight advantage for White.
| Rating | Games | White's Edge |
|---|---|---|
| 800-1000 | 331 | -5.8%46 /0 /51 |
| 1000-1200 | 371 | +3.2%50 /0 /46 |
| 1200-1400 | 410 | +3.2%50 /0 /47 |
| 1400-1600 | 396 | +1.0%50 /0 /49 |
| 1600-1800 | 362 | -2.8%48 /0 /51 |
Based on 1,870 games · Updated March 2026
O Ataque de Grob é um dos movimentos de abertura mais raros no xadrez competitivo. Ao jogar 1.g4, o Branco cria imediatamente uma posição que nenhuma base de dados ou motor analisa bem. A maioria dos adversários fica completamente desorientada e começa a cometer erros logo nas primeiras jogadas.
O Grob leva a posições altamente desequilibradas que são difíceis de navegar sem preparação específica. O Branco tem vantagem psicológica porque o adversário raramente estudou as linhas.
Embora não seja teoricamente sólido, o Grob é muito eficaz no nível de clube e amador onde os adversários não sabem como responder. A taxa de sucesso prático pode ser surpreendentemente alta.
O bispo de g2 torna-se extremamente activo ao longo da diagonal g2-a8, criando pressão constante. O bispo pode dominar jogos inteiros se o adversário não souber como neutralizá-lo.
Watch out for these dangerous tactical pitfalls
Se o Preto capturar em g4 com 1...d5 2.Ag2 Axg4, o Branco pode jogar 3.f3! expulsando o bispo e ganhando tempo para o desenvolvimento. Muitos jogadores não antecipam este recuo de peão.
1. g4 e5 2. Bg2 d5 3. c4 dxc4 4. Qa4+ Nd7 5. Qxc4 Ngf6 6. g5 Ne4 7. Bxe4
In the Grob Gambit, after White wins back the c4 pawn, the g5 push creates immediate tactical complications. After 6...Ne4, White plays 7.Bxe4 dxe4 (if Black takes) and then Qxe4+ with a dangerous open game. The g5 pawn advance accelerates White's kingside attack faster than Black can organize defense.
1. g4 d5 2. Bg2 c6 3. h4 Nf6 4. h5 h6?? 5. g5 hxg5 6. h6
Against the h4-h5 expansion, if Black plays the natural h6 to stop h6, White plays g5! After hxg5 6.h6!, White gets a dangerous passed h-pawn that marches toward promotion. Black's h6 move created the very weakness that White's pawn storm exploits. Black should respond to h5 with ...Ne4 instead.
Use o Grob como arma secreta em partidas rápidas
Estude as respostas mais comuns do adversário
Não tente o Grob em torneios sérios sem preparação adequada
Aprenda os planos típicos do bispo em g2
Jogue muitas partidas com o Grob para ganhar experiência nas posições
As Black facing the Grob, focus on claiming the center: 1...d5 2...e5. Don't try to refute it tactically on move 1.
If Black doesn't take the g4 pawn, it becomes an attacking pawn — use g5 and h4-h5 to create direct kingside threats.
Study Basman's games with unorthodox openings to understand the practical psychology behind playing 1.g4 — the chaos IS the opening.
We automatically check if you fall for these specific traps.
Grob's Attack (1.g4) is one of the most unconventional openings in chess. White immediately grabs kingside space against all opening principles. After 1...d5, White plays 2.Bg2 and 3.h3, building a unique setup. At the club level it creates chaotic positions that are difficult to handle without preparation.
We track your success rate in positions arising from 1.g4, identify when the unorthodox approach creates real problems for opponents, and when it backfires.
Common questions about Grob's Attack analysis
Henri Grob was a Swiss master who spent decades demonstrating that 1.g4 was a genuinely playable opening. He wrote extensively about the opening and his practical results with it were surprisingly good. His analysis showed that the Bg2 diagonal pressure combined with h3-d3 creates a coherent strategic system, not just random chaos.
British Grandmaster Michael Basman became the most famous modern practitioner of outrageous first moves, including 1.g4. His games against strong Grandmasters demonstrated that unconventional openings create genuine practical problems even against well-prepared opponents. Basman's thesis: in modern chess where everyone memorizes 20 moves of theory, playing uncharted territory from move 1 creates real value.
Magnus Carlsen deployed 1.g4 in a bullet game, winning convincingly through the diagonal pressure and subsequent tactical sequences. The game demonstrated that even the world's best player uses unconventional openings as psychological weapons in fast chess. Carlsen's Grob game was widely shared and sparked renewed interest in the opening.
American club player John Penquite became an unlikely Grob specialist, scoring heavily in club tournaments with 1.g4. His games are extensively documented online as examples of how the Grob's chaos factor makes it highly effective against unprepared players at the club level. Penquite's success demonstrated that the opening's practical value significantly exceeds its theoretical evaluation.
Analyze other openings similar to the Grob's Attack
The eccentric 1.b3. See if your long-diagonal pressure translates into wins.
The Orangutan: 1.b4. See if your flank strategy confuses opponents enough to win.
Aggressive flank opening. See if your kingside attack succeeds.
Get a complete breakdown of your play across all openings, not just the Grob's Attack.
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