King's Indian Defense

E60–E99 ♚ Black advanced hypermodern dynamic counterattack fischer kasparov

One of the most fighting defenses in chess. Black lets White build a big center, then counter-attacks with ...e5. Championed by Fischer, Kasparov, Bronstein, and anyone who is comfortable with their position looking bad and then being brilliant.

Starting moves

The King's Indian Defense 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.

1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.Nc3 Bg7 4.e4 d6 5.Nf3 O-O 6.h3 e5 7.Qb3 exd4 …

What you'll learn

This repertoire includes 51 annotated lines (4 beginner, 30 intermediate, 17 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:

  • King's Indian: Grabbing e4 After Qb3 Loses the Knight
  • King's Indian Defense Beginner: ...Nf3 (8.Nxe4)
  • King's Indian Defense Beginner: ...Nf3 (8.Nxe4)
  • King's Indian: Na4 Queenside Probe — Qe8 Counters
  • King's Indian: Nd5 Fork Trick — Taking e4 Loses to Nc3
  • King's Indian: c5 Space Grab — Taking d4 Loses the Knight

How to study the King's Indian Defense

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.

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Drill every line with spaced repetition. Start with one opening free — no credit card.

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