Marcus smiled. “It’s not about the PGN. It’s about seeing what the position wants .”
That night, he clicked through the first chapters. The interactive PGN viewer loaded a famous Capablanca game. Instead of just clicking through moves, Marcus had to reassess . A pop-up asked: “What is White’s permanent structural weakness?”
That night, he opened Chessable, pulled up the final PGN of his own win, and added a new tag to the file: [Result "Reassessment - Complete"] . Chessable Silman How To Reassess Your Chess pgn
Three months later, at a weekend open tournament, Marcus sat across from a 1900-rated kid who played the Najdorf like a robot. The kid launched a ferocious kingside attack. Old Marcus would have panicked, thrown pieces in defense, and lost.
After the game, the kid asked, “What line was that? I have that position in my PGN database.” Marcus smiled
Marcus stared at the screen, the chessboard a mess of tension. His rating had flatlined at 1600 for eighteen months. He’d tried tactics, opening traps, even endgame tablebases. Nothing worked.
Then he found it: Silman’s How to Reassess Your Chess on Chessable. The course promised not moves, but thinking . The sample video showed GM Silman talking about “imbalances” – pawn structures, bishop vs. knight, weak squares. Marcus bought it on impulse. The interactive PGN viewer loaded a famous Capablanca game
He guessed. Wrong. The system corrected him: “Backward c-pawn on a half-open file.”