Quick Answer
To get good at chess, play games slow enough to think, review the critical mistake, practice the concept behind it, learn opening principles, drill tactics, study endgames, and repeat recurring patterns with spaced repetition.
Play the right mix of games
You need enough games to see patterns and enough time to think. Mix rapid games for learning, blitz for testing, and slower analysis for serious repair.
- Do not play only bullet if your goal is improvement.
- Review the first major turning point.
- Track repeated mistakes by concept.
Turn mistakes into drills
A mistake is only useful if it becomes a practice item. If you missed a fork, drill forks. If you traded badly, study trades. If your king was unsafe, train king safety.
- Name the concept.
- Read the lesson.
- Practice examples.
- Let spaced repetition bring it back.
Build a style without hiding weaknesses
Your style should guide training, not excuse blind spots. Attackers still need endgames. Positional players still need tactics. Technicians still need openings.
- Lean into your strengths.
- Train one weakness at a time.
- Choose openings that create useful practice.
Common Questions
What is the fastest way to get better at chess?
The fastest sustainable path is playing thoughtful games, reviewing one critical mistake, and drilling the exact concept that caused it.
How many chess puzzles should I do?
Quality matters more than volume. A small daily set with review is better than rushing hundreds without understanding the motif.
Do I need a coach to get good at chess?
A coach helps, but you can improve a lot with structured lessons, analysis, tactics, and a practice plan tied to your own games.