I’ve recently played a game with white on lichess and I enjoyed it a lot, so I decided to share it as my first game on my blog. I’m playing with the white pieces.
e4 g6
d3 Bg7
Nc3 d6
Be3 Bxc3+
Already very interesting: normally you don’t want to give up your fianchettoed dark square bishop, as it’s on a very strong diagonal and its loss means you will have a lot of dark square weaknesses.
bxc3 Nc6
Qd2 Nf6
Nf3 O-O
Bh6 Re8
Exploiting the dark square weaknesses.
h4 Bg4
Be2 Bxf3
Bxf3 Ne5
Be2 d5
f4 Nc6
Here I made an error: I should have gone for Bf4, Nc6, e5 which gives me an advantage, because after f4 he has Neg4 which forces a trade with the dark square bishop. Fortunately, he blundered as well and retreated with the knight. And now I started playing very precisely and created a very strong attack.
e5 Nd7
h5 f6
hxg6 fxe5
gxh7+ Kxh7
After that, there’s a forced mate in 6. There is more than one solution, I was able to find one, I’ll show you a photo of the position before showing the continuation.
fxe5 Ndxe5
Qg5 Rg8
Bf8#
Here’s the link to the lichess analysis board: