I'd say it will give you knowledge on the most common responses but not on the ones that you would face if your opponents take the time to think.
Otherwise, it's useless. You'll build bad habits.
I'd say it will give you knowledge on the most common responses but not on the ones that you would face if your opponents take the time to think.
Otherwise, it's useless. You'll build bad habits.
Play Longer Time Controls...
For many at the beginner-novice level, speed chess tends to be primarily an exercise in moving pieces around faster than your opponent while avoiding checkmate, in hopes that his/her clock runs out sooner than yours. And/or hoping to notice and exploit your opponent’s blunders while hoping they don't notice yours. The reason for this is that there is little time to think about what you should be doing.
It makes sense that taking more time to think about what you should be doing would promote improvement in your chess skills and results.
An effective way to improve your chess is therefore to play mostly longer time controls, including "daily" chess, so you have time to think about what you should be doing.
This is not to suggest that you should necessarily play exclusively slow or daily time controls, but they should be a significant percentage of your games, at least as much, if not more so than speed games which, while they may be fun, do almost nothing to promote an understanding of how to play the game well.
Here's what IM Jeremy Silman, well-known chess book author, has to say on the topic...
https://www.chess.com/article/view/longer-time-controls-are-more-instructive
And Dan Heisman, well-known chess teacher and chess book author…
https://web.archive.org/web/20140627052239/http:/www.chesscafe.com/text/heisman16.pdf
https://www.chess.com/blog/RussBell/dan-heisman-resources
and the experience of a FIDE Master...
https://www.chess.com/forum/view/general/how-blitz-and-bullet-rotted-my-brain-don-t-let-it-rot-yours
for some good stuff on general chess improvement, with a view toward learning what you should be doing, browse my blog.....
https://www.chess.com/blog/RussBell
Time Controls - Everything You Wanted To Know...
https://www.chess.com/blog/RussBell/time-controls-everything-you-wanted-to-know
This is very bad advice. If you want to get better you should not play bullet or even blitz and only rapid or classical and practise some puzzles
Fun fact: almost 3 years later the OP is still 300-rated in rapid and blitz. The strategy doesn't seem to work too well.
No. Play longer time controls to improve. Bullet is just a time mode where you don't have time to think and the only thing that matters is how good your connection / mouse is.
Honestly IMO bullet is just 50% luck and 50% fast play, like I know so many games that I've on just because I was playing faster even in dead lost positions.
Bullet is for increasing 3 4 move intuition and it's only for that it's to improve speed and not waste time over something simple I dont have a fide rating but playing bullet games is great just dont stress over the losses it can be pressuring
Yes, it does improve but not bullet the whole year. For example, your tactics solving are very simple sets compliment it with bullet games. When you solve a bit deeper tactics. Play 10 minute games. Hard tactics compliment it with 30 minute games. That's what I did at some point. i did not mind the ratings. Now I do not solve or train chess anymore. I just pure playing for fun.
This isn’t enough of a sample size to draw firm conclusions, but just about 100% of the people saying bullet chess hurts your development as a chess player three years ago have either left the site or have not improved.
A good thesis to test would be: people writing numerous comments about improvement are unlikely to be improving themselves.
I don't think bullet can hurt your development, necessarily. But that depends on the player.
If you're just spamming premoves and hardly thinking at all - and then spamming the "rematch" or "new game" button after each game, then you're probably not doing yourself any favors.
But if you're actually trying to play decent chess - just at a really quick timer - and if you're actually attempting to learn and improve from those games, then even bullet can prove useful ...
Though, to do the latter well, you likely should be at least somewhat experienced. The fact this thread is being given as a recommendation in the "Beginners" forum makes the advice itself rather dubious.
May I ask, how do people feel about playing bullet to learn openings? I have discovered myself to be absolutely rubbish at blitz (absolutely terrible!), but funnily enough playing bullet on the other site, I have actually found a bit of success.
I play system opening for white and black (with slight variations for some moves), and I just find that through learning the common responses, I have a pretty solid position after 30 seconds 80ish% of the time....and then I can usually nurse my opposition into time trouble.