Queen's Indian Defense

E12–E19 ♚ Black intermediate fianchetto solid piece-play kramnik

Black fianchettoes on the queenside with ...b6 and ...Bb7, controlling the center with pieces rather than pawns. A favorite of Petrosian, Kramnik, and players who enjoy solid piece play.

Starting moves

The Queen'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 e6 3.Nf3 b6 4.Bf4

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:

  • Queen's Indian Defense: Miles Variation
  • Queen's Indian Defense, with e3
  • Queen's Indian Defense: Spassky System
  • Queen's Indian Defense: Fianchetto Variation, Rubinstein Variation
  • Queen's Indian Defense: Yates Variation
  • Queen's Indian Defense: Euwe Variation

How to study the Queen'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.

Learn the Queen's Indian Defense for free

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

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