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Candidate Move Selection - How Strong Players Narrow Their Choices

One of the biggest differences between weak and strong decision making in chess is not calculation depth — it is move selection. Strong players do not try to calculate everything. They first narrow the position to a small set of candidate moves.

🔥 Selection insight: Success starts with the list of moves you consider. If your candidate list is poor, your calculation is wasted. Learn to identify the most forcing and logical moves instantly.
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💡 Key insight: Calculation only works after you choose the right moves to calculate.

What Is a Candidate Move?

A candidate move is a move that deserves serious consideration. It is not every legal move — it is every move that makes sense given the position.

In most positions, there are:

Your job is to identify those candidates before you calculate.

Why Calculating Everything Fails

Players who try to calculate too many moves run into the same problems:

Candidate move selection fixes this by reducing complexity first.

How Strong Players Generate Candidate Moves

Strong players don’t guess. They use simple filters to generate candidates.

High-quality candidate sources:

If a move does none of these, it usually isn’t a real candidate.

The 3-Move Rule (A Practical Limit)

In most positions, aim for:

More than that usually means you haven’t filtered properly.

Candidate Moves vs “Good-Looking Moves”

Many blunders happen because a move looks good but was never checked against alternatives.

A move is not a candidate just because:

It becomes a candidate only after you ask: “Does this move survive basic safety checks?”

Where Candidate Selection Fits in the Thinking Process

Candidate move selection comes before calculation, and after basic safety awareness.

Skipping this step leads to random calculation and missed dangers.

Common Errors in Candidate Move Selection

Bottom Line

You don’t need to calculate more. You need to calculate less — but better.

Candidate move selection is the step that makes that possible.

⚠ Avoiding Chess Blunders Guide
This page is part of the Avoiding Chess Blunders Guide — Learn how to stop blundering by keeping pieces protected, checking forcing moves, and using simple safety routines to play more confident, mistake-free chess.
🧐 Chess Decision Making Guide
This page is part of the Chess Decision Making Guide — Learn a repeatable decision-making system — safety first, candidate moves, evaluation, selective calculation, and choosing the simplest strong move.