Chess is a game of strategy, tactics, and pattern recognition — and the fastest improvement usually comes from a structured learning path. This page explains how my courses are organised, what level to start with, and how to choose based on your goals — then you can browse the full library on the hub page: Online Chess Courses →
Each course is built as a practical roadmap — not just a collection of random videos. The goal is to help you win more games by improving the skills that decide results most often: tactics, calculation, planning, endgames, openings, and decision-making.
The library covers everything from beginner foundations through to advanced deep-dives. Here’s a simple way to think about the levels:
Different courses emphasise different skills, but these are the most common “wins” students report:
The simplest approach is to choose based on your biggest pain point:
I’m Tryfon Gavriel (known online as Kingscrusher). I’ve been playing competitive chess for decades and teaching for many years through video courses and ChessWorld. My teaching style aims to be clear and practical — focused on skills you can apply immediately in your own games.
If you’d like the full overview of all courses (including the latest ordering, bundles, and offers), use the main course hub page:
No. Most courses are designed around plans, patterns, and example games — so you learn what to do in real positions. Memorisation is kept minimal unless a course is specifically about opening theory.
Choose based on symptoms. If you often hang pieces or miss simple tactics, start with tactics and core skills. If you rarely blunder but feel “planless,” focus on planning and structures.
You can — but most players improve faster by pairing an opening course with tactics/calc training, because openings create positions, and tactics decide results.