Nimzo-Indian Defense

E20–E59 ♚ Black intermediate strategic bishop-pair structural classical nimzowitsch

One of the most respected openings in chess. Black pins the Nc3 with Bb4, willing to give up the bishop pair for strong structural compensation. A positional classic.

Starting moves

The Nimzo-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 e6 3.Nc3 Bb4 4.Nf3 c5 5.d5 Ne4

What you'll learn

This repertoire includes 15 annotated lines (4 beginner, 6 intermediate, 5 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:

  • Nimzo-Indian Defense: Three Knights Variation, Euwe Variation
  • Nimzo-Indian Defense: Classical Variation, Milner-Barry Variation
  • Nimzo-Indian Defense: Rubinstein System, Taimanov Variation
  • Nimzo-Indian Defense: Leningrad Variation, Benoni Defense
  • Nimzo-Indian Defense: Rubinstein System, Rubinstein Variation, Main Line
  • Nimzo-Indian Defense: Simagin Variation

How to study the Nimzo-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.

Learn the Nimzo-Indian Defense for free

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

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