I hope you enjoyed this lesson and all the other lessons in this course and that you learnt a lot from it. And then if you ever want to play in an official chess tournament then you will have the confidence to notate your game because at tournaments it’s usually mandatory to notate your game. Of course, if you’ve never notated your games before, then it will initially feel a bit strange but you will get used to it very quickly once you’ve done it a few times. And the second reason why it’s useful to notate your game is that you can show your game to a stronger player or to a coach and they can help you understand your bad moves and what you should have done. Firstly, if you notate your moves, then you can look at your game again at a later stage and by doing so you will see where you made bad moves and what you should done instead. There’s two reasons why this is important. To conclude this lesson, I want to say that if you want to improve your game, then it’s a good idea to write down your games. This is one way how you can block the 4-move checkmate if someone tries it against you. This move is good because it defends the pawn on e5 and, also supports the pawn on f7. And now, the easiest way to block white’s plans is to move your queen in front of your king. … if white moves their queen to h5, or even if they move the queen to f3 – the idea is the same – to attack on f7 – but usually white will put the queen on h5 because from here it also threatens the pawn on e5. If white tries the 4-move checkmate on you, moving your queen to e7 is a simple and effective way to stop their attempt.
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