I am just a beginner and can visualize at the most 3 to 4 moves.|||3 to 4 moves in correct situation is good.Knowledge,Practice and ability to recognize pattern is more important.
According to de Groot, this perception, made possible by years of practice and study, is more important than the sheer ability to anticipate moves. De Groot also showed that chess masters can memorize positions shown for a few seconds almost perfectly. The ability to memorize does not, alone, account for this skill, since masters and novices, when faced with random arrangements of chess pieces, had equivalent recall (about half a dozen positions in each case). Rather, it is the ability to recognize patterns, which are then memorized, which distinguished the skilled players from the novices. When the positions of the pieces were taken from an actual game, the masters had almost total positional recall|||Oh SORRY. I cannot see 3 to 4 moves at all times. I forsee only 2 moves. I am not much advanced player like club players. When I use Chessmaster Gradnmaster Edition, I hardly defeat the computer-opponent with 1350 rating, and rarely the stronger player.
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|||Depends, if the line of play, that they are considering has forced moves in it, and no other off branching lines, then quite a way. Sometimes I will play something, not having fully calculated everything, but a feeling that intuitively it is correct.
Fischer said there are only so many positions.
If you have a dictionary of chess positions [memorized], and when you are playing, suddenly, bingo, there is a something similar on the board, and then play to that, and win.
If I said is d4 a light or dark square?, can you quickly tell me what it is?
At about 1600 rating onwards, it does require a good visual memory and a memory of positions. But if you play 5 minute or 10 minute chess with clocks, then the basic skills of seeing ahead only a few moves is all that is needed and that is fun chess.|||That has always been a big question. I like the answer a master supposedly gave, "Only one, but it is always the best one!".
Seriously, it depends on the situation. I am hardly a master, but in some games I can foresee 5-6 moves ahead. This is in the case where I or my opponent is faced with "must" moves.
Certainly the ability to visualize is important. If you can visualize 3-4, you are doing well. The ability to spot tactical opportunities is a key. All masters are adept at tactics. Part of that is the ability to recognize patterns that lend themselves to tactics.
Learning endgames is important as well. Opening study is not so important, despite the huge number of books on the subject. Better to know something about opening in general and get familiar with one opening for White and two or three defenses for Black, until you have experience.
Good luck and have fun!!
wl|||The skills of a chess player is about 75% foreseeing of moves. Not just foreseeing of moves, but only doing so correctly, for which practice is needed. Beginners don't think ahead. Club players start to do so...and so on.
If you visualize 3 to 4 moves correctly, then you are not a beginner,more likely you are an intermediate player.
I am a State Champion and I can visualize up to 8 moves...|||well it is not how many moves you can see. it is more the lines your see. I usually try to look for about five lines and go about 3 to 7 moves in them.
grandmaster think about 20 moves but I don't think that is correct seeing how they do a lot of memorizing of the attacks so it more like if I showed you a deck of cards, then you could tell me that there are 52 cards and the suites.
every one else beside grand master try memorize but more or less just guess. since you never know what really your opponent will do.|||I would say 3 to 4 moves at a time. Good players will spot a chance to attack, and then attack in full force until their opponents defense falls apart. Experts might be able to think 8 moves head. If your like bobby fisher, then they can think 25 moves head.|||3 to 4 moves is good for a beginner, 5 to 6 moves is your next step
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