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OK I mean I obviously think the opening post the lines to that degree of detail approximately already, which is why I asked which defenses you would like me to give more about. There is a bit more on the Grünfeld in later replies here. What I can add to my opening post is: d4 d5: - Vienna: 5 e4, 6 Bxc4 (pawn sac) - Ragozin: 5 cd5 ed5 6 Bg5 - 4 .. Nbd7 5 Bf4 dc4 6 e3 Nb6 7 Bxc4 - Tarrasch: a few words on the main lines (three illustrative games) - Chigorin: nothing given. d4 Nf6 I missed a bit more so let me just give all the lines: 1 Queen's Indian: as explained above, g3, Qc2, d5, sacking a pawn. He follows for example Mamedyarov-Gelfand, 2006. 2. Bogo: short video, Nbd2, based mainly on Mamedyarov-Stocek, 2007 (yes Mamedyarov does seem to pop up every now and then) 3. Benoni: Bf4 as mentioned above. 4 Snake Benoni: 7 g4 (Piket-Adams 1995) 5 Czech Benoni: g3 stuff. 6 Blumenfeld: haven't seen these yet. He either plays with g3 or more usually with an early e4 7 Benko: Nescafe-Frappe attack (two example games, one of them d Feller-Edouard 2008) 8 KID: Be2, Be3, followed up usually by f3, g4, d5, and look around. 9 Grünfeld: see above for some discussion from others. 10: Budapest Gambit: e4, f4. 11 English defense: standard stuff with e4 Bd3. 12 Black Knights Tango: 3 Nc3 e5 4 d5 Ne7 5 h4 13 d4 f5 f3 In the meantime he also released all the pgn's for buyers so it makes it a lot more browsable than it was before (the Slav video is really an hour and a half long!). And I agree the d4 d5 videos are easier to understand, partly because the moves are very consistent (knights out, e4, e5 if the knight is on f6. don't worry if any of this drops a pawn or two. attack.) and partly because he seems more enthusiastic/eager to teach there. Probably the moves/minute ratio is a lot lower and this gives you a better experience. But none of this is a serious issue with part 2 with d4 Nf6, it's more that part 1 is so well made.
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