6/29/2026 – The second volume of the FritzTrainer Master Class series revisits the games and career of Mikhail Tal (pictured in 1959), the eighth world chess champion, combining biographical context with training material. The FritzTrainer examines Tal's openings, strategy, endgame play and tactical imagination through video lessons by Dorian Rogozenco, Mihail Marin, Oliver Reeh and Karsten Müller. Two examples, against Antonio Medina and Boris Spassky, show how Tal's calculation and attacking instinct shaped his best-known games. | Photo: Anefo / Dutch National Archive
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Your personal chess trainer. Your toughest opponent. Your strongest ally. FRITZ 20 is more than just a chess engine – it is a training revolution for ambitious players and professionals. Whether you are taking your first steps into the world of serious chess training, or already playing at tournament level, FRITZ 20 will help you train more efficiently, intelligently and individually than ever before.
YOUR PERSONAL CHESS COACH - Whether you’re taking your first steps into the world of club chess, or already playing at a tournament level: with FRITZ, you can train more efficiently, intelligently and with a more personalised approach than ever before. FRITZ is more than just a chess engine – it’s a training revolution! Whether you’re taking your first steps into the world of club chess, or already playing at a tournament level: with FRITZ, you can train more efficiently, intelligently and with a more personalised approach than ever before.
In this volume, we dive into core aspects of chess technique. Smyslov taught the principle of tactical hierarchy, “checks, double attacks, and unprotected pieces”, and Mikhalchishin demonstrates how this method of calculation is vital.
€34.90
The Magician in action
Mikhail Tal, the eighth world chess champion, remains one of the most recognisable figures in the royal game's history. Born in Riga on 9 November 1936, the grandmaster became known for a style based on initiative, tactical imagination and a willingness to enter unclear positions. His games often featured sacrifices that were difficult to calculate fully, but which created practical problems his opponents could not solve at the board.
Top trainers strongly recommend regular study of well-explained classical games to improve your understanding of chess in the long term. 33 modern classics are explained in details on this video course.
Tal became world champion in 1960, when he defeated Mikhail Botvinnik, and held the title for one year before losing the return match. His period at the top was short, but his influence on the game was lasting. Nicknamed "Misha" and "the Magician from Riga", Tal is still associated with some of the most memorable attacking games ever played. He died in Moscow on 28 June 1992, thirty-four years ago today.
Mikhail Tal in 1988 | Photo: Rob Croes / Anefo
A FritzTrainer devoted to Tal's ideas
Master Class Vol. 2: Mihail Tal presents the former world champion through a series of video lessons devoted to different aspects of his chess. Dorian Rogozenco, Mihail Marin, Oliver Reeh and Karsten Müller examine Tal's openings, strategic understanding, endgame technique and tactical play. The course is built not only around Tal’s famous combinations, but also around the broader qualities that allowed him to remain one of the strongest players in the world after losing the title.
The FritzTrainer also places Tal's career in context. It recalls his victory over Botvinnik in 1960, his defeat in the return match a year later, his six USSR Championship titles, his team gold medals with the Soviet Union at eight Chess Olympiads and his victory at the 1988 World Blitz Championship. It also notes his unbeaten run of 93 consecutive games in 1973-74, a record that underlines the practical strength behind his reputation as a purely tactical player. The video course includes all Tal's games, many of them annotated, as well as comments, tournament tables and interactive tests.
On this DVD Dorian Rogozenco, Mihail Marin, Oliver Reeh and Karsten Müller present the 8. World Chess Champion in video lessons: his openings, his understanding of chess strategy, his artful endgame play, and finally his immortal combinations.
Endgame magic in Palma de Mallorca
One of the examples analysed by endgame specialist Karsten Müller comes from Tal's 1966 game against Antonio Medina in Palma de Mallorca. Tal reached an endgame with queen and knight against queen and bishop, and converted it with precision. Müller highlights the importance of the queen-and-knight tandem in this case, noting that he does not agree that this duo is always stronger than queen-and-bishop. The presence of Black's advanced pawn on h3 is crucial in the setup.
The key final idea was 38...Ne3!, a great-looking move that showed Tal's ability to find forcing resources even outside the middlegame.
White cannot stop the promotion of the h-pawn!
A direct attack against Spassky
Another section looks at Tal's 1979 game against Boris Spassky in Montreal. In that encounter, Tal took advantage of a positional error by his opponent. Spassky's 17.Qa5? placed the queen away from the main area of play, allowing Black to soon begin a direct attack, with the main idea of sacrificing his bishop on h2.
From that moment, Tal coordinated his pieces against the white king with characteristic energy, starting with 17...Ne5 18.Nxe5 Bxe5 19.Nc4 Rd5!
IM Oliver Reeh's analysis also points to a striking variation that did not appear in the game. The move 22...Bxg2!! introduces a tactical sequence of the kind naturally associated with Tal, and Reeh suggests that it is the sort of resource Tal was likely to have seen in his calculations.
On this DVD Dorian Rogozenco, Mihail Marin, Oliver Reeh and Karsten Müller present the 8. World Chess Champion in video lessons: his openings, his understanding of chess strategy, his artful endgame play, and finally his immortal combinations.
Carlos Alberto ColodroCarlos Colodro is a Hispanic Philologist from Bolivia. He works as a freelance translator and writer since 2012. A lot of his work is done in chess-related texts, as the game is one of his biggest interests, along with literature and music.
6/5/2026 – The 14th edition of the Norway Chess super-tournament is taking place from 25 May to 5 June at Deichman Bjorvika in Oslo. An open event and a women's event are being played concurrently with an identical number of players, the same format and an equivalent prize fund. Wesley So, Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu and Alireza Firouzja enter the final round with chances to take the title. Key pairings: Firouzja v. So and Pragg v. Keymer. | Follow the games live starting at 17.00 CEST (11.00 ET, 20.30 IST) | Photo: Norway Chess / Michal Walusza
5/8/2026 – Bent Larsen was the strongest chess player in Danish history and, for many years, the leading Western challenger behind Bobby Fischer, winning the Danish Championship six times and achieving major international successes. This ChessBase training course explores his brilliant attacking style, creative positional ideas, and opening innovations such as 1.b3 and his contributions to the Accelerated Dragon, while also examining his middlegame, endgame, and tactical mastery. Renowned experts including Peter Heine Nielsen, Dorian Rogozenco, Mihail Marin, Karsten Müller, and Oliver Reeh provide deep analysis, personal stories, and insights into Larsen’s unique chess legacy.
The Elephant Gambit (1.e4.e5 2.Nf3 d5!?) has never really been given the attention it deserves. It is a very useful surprise weapon. Let us list the advantages of playing this particular opening: 1) Shock value 2) It is very aggressive. Black can take over the initiative early. 3) Many tricky lines 4) Unorthodox. Black is basically taking the game to the opponent as early as move two. Not many openings do that! It's a perfect opening for young players and club players to adopt. Let Andrew Martin select a repertoire for you on this 60 mins, which, if used with discretion, will rack up the points. I am sure that you will enjoy this unusual tour of the Elephant Gambit.
YOUR PERSONAL CHESS COACH - Whether you’re taking your first steps into the world of club chess, or already playing at a tournament level: with FRITZ, you can train more efficiently, intelligently and with a more personalised approach than ever before.
Chess is a concrete game. There is no way around training your calculation skills. Improve your visualization, pattern recognition and learn calculation techniques such as reciprocal thinking with this course.
This compact course is designed specifically for practical play. Instead of overwhelming you with endless theory, it focuses on the critical lines, typical plans, and recurring tactical ideas.
Slav and Semi-Slav Powerbase 2026 is a database and contains a total of 11 766 games from Mega 2026 or the Correspondence Database 2026, of which 1136 are annotated.
For the Slav and Semi-Slav Powerbook 2026 the ratings average was set again at 2400. 2.24 million games from the engine room of playchess.com met this threshold, to which were added over 130 000 games played by humans.
In this volume, we dive into core aspects of chess technique. Smyslov taught the principle of tactical hierarchy, “checks, double attacks, and unprotected pieces”, and Mikhalchishin demonstrates how this method of calculation is vital.
Videos: Nico Zwirs examines two Petroffs from the 2026 Candidates. Robert Ris has a tip against the Caro-Kann Advance Variation with 3…c5. Fiona Sieber reveals a surprise weapon against the Najdorf. ‘Lucky Bag’ with 40 analyses by Ganguly, L'Ami et al.
€14.90
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