Caro-Kann Advance (White)
The Short System against the Caro-Kann Advance (1.e4 c6 2.d4 d5 3.e5 Bf5 4.Nf3 e6 5.Be2). White sidesteps sharp theory for calm development — castle, route the knight Nbd2–b3, and squeeze with the extra central space. A low-risk, high-control way to play 3.e5 that scores well without memorising forcing lines.
Starting moves
The Caro-Kann Advance (White) typically begins with the following sequence. In GoWinChess you'll drill these moves until they're automatic — so you never have to think twice in the opening.
What you'll learn
This repertoire includes 8 annotated lines (3 beginner, 3 intermediate, 2 advanced) covering the most important variations and the tactical traps that catch unprepared opponents. You progress from forgiving beginner lines up to the sharpest main-line theory. A few of them:
- Caro Advance: Short System Setup — Nf3, Be2, O-O, Nbd2
- Caro Advance: vs 5...c5 — 6.Be3 cxd4 7.Nxd4 Outpost
- Caro Advance: vs ...Ne7 — 6.O-O, c3 Pawn-Chain Clamp
- Caro Advance: The Nh4 Idea — Trading Off the f5-Bishop
- Caro Advance: 6.Be3 Qb6 7.Nc3 — Ignoring the b2-Pawn
- Caro Advance: Short System — ...Bg6, Nbd2, Nb3 Maneuver
How to study the Caro-Kann Advance (White)
Reading about an opening isn't the same as remembering it over the board. GoWinChess uses spaced repetition — the same memory science behind Anki and medical-school study — to schedule each position right before you'd forget it. You Learn a line, then Drill it from memory, then the algorithm brings it back on the perfect day. New to the game? Start with Learn Chess in 15 Minutes.
Learn the Caro-Kann Advance (White) for free
Drill every line with spaced repetition. Start with one opening free — no credit card.
Start the interactive course →Play the other side of this matchup
Study how to handle the Caro-Kann Advance (White) from the other side of the board.
Related openings
One of the oldest openings ever played. White develops the bishop to c4, eyeing the sensitive f7 pawn. Leads to rich, instructive middlegames that have stood the test of 500 years.
The most analyzed opening in chess history. White pins Nc6 with Bb5, indirectly pressuring e5 three moves deep. Every world champion has played this. Every world champion has suffered in it too.
Kasparov's 1990 World Championship surprise. White opens the center immediately with 3.d4 rather than developing more pieces first. Direct, principled, and still devastating at the highest level.
The original romantic opening — White sacrifices a pawn on move two for immediate central control and a ferocious attack. Beloved by Morphy, Spassky, and anyone who just wants to have fun.