25/11/2016 – El Campeón del Mundo, Magnus Carlsen ha ganado la primera partida en su duelo contra Sergey Karjakin en Nueva York. Ahora el marcador está en 5:5 a falta de dos partidas más. Sergey Karjakin tenía varias oportunidades para mantener las tablas en la décima partida, pero fue una partida dura para los dos y ambos cometieron errores en un momento dado. Al final fue Magnus el que se río último. Nos alegramos mucho de que Wesley So haya analizado la partida de la décima ronda para ChessBase. Lo que está pasando en Nueva York mientras tanto...
novedad: ChessBase 18 - Mega package
Para ganar, primero debes aprender
La nueva versión 18 de ChessBase ofrece posibilidades completamente nuevas para el entrenamiento y el análisis de partidas: análisis del estilo de juego, búsqueda de temas estratégicos, acceso a 6.000 millones de partidas de Lichess, preparación del oponente tras una exploración de sus partidas en Lichess, descarga de partidas de Chess.com con API incorporada, motor de análisis en la nube y mucho más.
YOUR PERSONAL CHESS COACH - Whether you’re taking your first steps into the world of club chess, or already playing at a tournament level: with FRITZ, you can train more efficiently, intelligently and with a more personalised approach than ever before. FRITZ is more than just a chess engine – it’s a training revolution! Whether you’re taking your first steps into the world of club chess, or already playing at a tournament level: with FRITZ, you can train more efficiently, intelligently and with a more personalised approach than ever before.
04.30 Hamburgo CET/ 10.30 pm Nueva York: ChessBase India ha hecho un experimento y a ha analizado la décima partida con la herramienta del "análisis táctico" de ChessBase 14. Para visitar la página de ChessBase India, pinche aquí.
02.32 / 20.32: ¡Karjakin se rinde! Carlsen ha igualado el marcador. La derrota sería un golpe bajo bastante fuerte para Karjakin que podría haber mantenido las tablas en 20 movimientos. A falta de las dos partidas el resultado de momento es 5:5. (Cada uno ha ganado una partida en 10 enfrentamientos, las demás partidas habían concluido en tablas).
02.27 / 20.27: Carlsen ha resuelto los problemas más gordos y ha alcanzado un final de torres que tiene toda pinta de que podrá ser convertido en una victoria. Judit Polgar: "Es imposible que Carlsen no vaya a ganar aquello".
02.10 / 20.10: Karjakin está mostrando una defensa tenaz de nuevo y con 63...Rb8 le ha plantado problemas inesperados a Carlsen. Además el tiempo en el reloj de Carlsen se está consumiendo y de repente tiene que encontrar los movimientos precisos para poder ganar la partida. '
02.02 / 20.02: Es un final de partida, pero de repente hay flechazos de táctica y Karjakin puede empezar a tener esperanzas que Carlsen pierda el camino.
..."no podía esperarle una hora": Magnus Carlsen. Tenía razón ¡insurrecto! « Je ne peux pas l'attendre une heure» Il avait raison. Bravo! pic.twitter.com/Gy53KG7TMY
YOUR PERSONAL CHESS COACH - Whether you’re taking your first steps into the world of club chess, or already playing at a tournament level: with FRITZ, you can train more efficiently, intelligently and with a more personalised approach than ever before.
The Hyper-Accelerated dragon is fast, from the very first moves, your bishop heads to g7, seizes the long diagonal, and turns into the most feared piece on the board.
It rewards players who love initiative and clear attacking plans.
The Hyper-Accelerated Dragon is fast, from the very first moves, your bishop heads to g7, seizes the long diagonal, and turns into the most feared piece on the board.
It rewards players who love initiative and clear attacking plans.
The Hyper-Accelerated dragon is fast, from the very first moves, your bishop heads to g7, seizes the long diagonal, and turns into the most feared piece on the board.
It rewards players who love initiative and clear attacking plans.
“Mate is great!” – Tactical training with Oliver Reeh, “The 8th rank” – Andy Woodward analyses his game against Magnus Carlsen from TePe Sigeman 2026, “A modern Nimzo-Indian” – Andrei Volokitin introduces readers to "his" system and much more!
Chess is a concrete game. There is no way around training your calculation skills. Improve your visualization, pattern recognition and learn calculation techniques such as reciprocal thinking with this course.
This compact course is designed specifically for practical play. Instead of overwhelming you with endless theory, it focuses on the critical lines, typical plans, and recurring tactical ideas.
Slav and Semi-Slav Powerbase 2026 is a database and contains a total of 11 766 games from Mega 2026 or the Correspondence Database 2026, of which 1136 are annotated.
9,90 €
We use cookies and comparable technologies to provide certain functions, to improve the user experience and to offer interest-oriented content. Depending on their intended use, analysis cookies and marketing cookies may be used in addition to technically required cookies. Here you can make detailed settings or revoke your consent (if necessary partially) with effect for the future. Further information can be found in our data protection declaration.
Pop-up for detailed settings
We use cookies and comparable technologies to provide certain functions, to improve the user experience and to offer interest-oriented content. Depending on their intended use, cookies may be used in addition to technically required cookies, analysis cookies and marketing cookies. You can decide which cookies to use by selecting the appropriate options below. Please note that your selection may affect the functionality of the service. Further information can be found in our privacy policy.
Technically required cookies
Technically required cookies: so that you can navigate and use the basic functions and store preferences.
Analysis Cookies
To help us determine how visitors interact with our website to improve the user experience.
Marketing-Cookies
To help us offer and evaluate relevant content and interesting and appropriate advertisement.