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Chess Opening Theory/1. e4/1...e5/2. Nf3/2...Nc6/3. Bc4/3...Nf6/4. d4

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Position in Forsyth-Edwards Notation (FEN)
Moves: 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Nf6 4. d4
Parent: Italian gameTwo knights defence

4. d4 · Open variation

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This aggressive move opens the queen's bishop for development while ignoring the attack on e4. Instead, White counterattacks Black's pawn. Black has their choice of pawns to capture.

4...exd4 is best, transposing into a line in the Scotch gambit. The usual continuation is 5. e5, and Black's knight is kicked to e4 either immediately, 5...Ne4, or after the tricky in-between move 5...d5 6. Bb5 Ne4 where Black first supports e4 with the d-pawn with tempo.

4....d6, simply defending the e-pawn, declines the transposition. White can answer 5. dxe5 dxe5 6. Qxd8+ Nxd8 7. Nxe5 Nxe4 and enter a queen-less middle game, or 5. d5, taking space and kicking away Black's knight.

Other ways to resolve the tension in the centre are poor.

4...Nxe4?! 5. dxe5 and White threatens Bxf7+ or Qd5, attacking both the e4-knight and f7. If Black ignores these threats they can unravel quickly: 5...Bc5?, the common amateur move preparing an attack on f2, is met with 6. Qd5 (threatens Qxf7#, forks bishop & knight) Bxf2+ 7. Ke2 O-O 8. Qxe4+- and Black's bishop is hanging. 5...d6 is best, allowing ...Be6 to relieve pressure on f7, and 6. Bxf7+ Kxf7 7. Qd5+ Be6 8. Qxe4± Black is down a pawn.

4...Nxd4? may look appealing, as Black captures the pawn and prepares to trade knights. Not so: White can sack on f7 to remove the defender of d4 with tempo and take the knight. 5. Bxf7+! Kxf7 6. Nxe5+ Ke8 7. Qxd4± White is up a pawn, has more development, and Black cannot castle. It's not necessarily plain sailing for White though: a tricky continuation is 7...Qe7 intending 8...c5, would force White's queen away from protecting either their pawn or their the knight, e.g. 7...Qe7 8. O-O? c5 9. Qc3 Nxe4=.

Theory table

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.

1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Nf6 4.d4

4

5

6

7

8

9

10
1 d4
exd4
O-O
Nxe4
Re1
d5
Bxd5
Qxd5
Nc3
Qh5
Nxe4
Be6
Bg5
Bd6
=
2 ...
...
...
Bc5
e5
d5
exf6
dxc4
Re1+
Be6
Ng5
Qd5
Nc3
Qf5
=
3 ...
...
e5
d5
Bb5
Ne4
Nxd4
Bd7
Bxc6
bxc6
O-O
Bc5
Be3
Qe7
=
4 ...
Nxd4
Nxe5
Ne6
O-O +/=
5 ...
Nxe4
dxe5
d6
Bxf7
Kxf7
Qd5+
Be6
Qxe4 +/=
6 ...
Bd6
O-O
exd4
e5 +/=

References

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v · t · e
Chess Opening Theory
1. e4 e5
Open game
2. Nf3
With 2...Nc6:
  • Four knights ()
  • Italian game ()
  • Spanish game ()

With other 2nd moves:

2. Other
1. e4 c5
Sicilian defence
1. e4 ...other: