What this guide covers
What this page helps you find
See which tactical or positional errors appear again and again instead of guessing from one loss.
Find the exact openings and structures where your score and decision quality start slipping.
Chess.com guide
Most players review Chess.com games one by one and still miss the bigger pattern. NextMove looks across your recent games to find the habits, openings, and decision points that repeat.
What this guide covers
See which tactical or positional errors appear again and again instead of guessing from one loss.
Find the exact openings and structures where your score and decision quality start slipping.
Use this page as the framework, then validate it against your own games with a fresh report.
Focus 1
See which tactical or positional errors appear again and again instead of guessing from one loss.
Focus 2
Find the exact openings and structures where your score and decision quality start slipping.
Focus 3
Leave the report with one concrete training priority rather than a pile of disconnected statistics.
Keep the process simple enough that you will actually repeat it after every batch of games.
Enter your Chess.com username and pick the game mode and sample size you care about.
Let NextMove run engine analysis across your recent games.
Use the report to study the openings, mistakes, and training priorities that show up most often.
Why NextMove
These guide pages are meant to frame the problem clearly, not replace analysis of your actual games. The real value comes from comparing the idea on this page against your own openings, recurring mistakes, and weakest phases.
If the guide matches what your report shows, you have a training direction. If it does not, that is useful too, because it tells you where your personal games differ from the generic advice most players get.
Use the workflow page for the product, then go deeper on the report angle you care about most.
Guide
Analyze Lichess games for patterns, weak phases, and study priorities.
Guide
Identify the mistakes that keep recurring across your games.
Guide
A practical framework for studying your own games instead of just reviewing moves.
Guide
A practical walkthrough of how NextMove turns your games into a repeatable training system.
Reading a guide is useful only if you test it against your own decisions, openings, and mistakes.