ChessWorld.net, founded in 2000, is an online chess site.In correspondence chess, the opening has a different purpose than in blitz or rapid.
The goal is not to surprise your opponent — but to reach a healthy, understandable position that rewards planning, patience, and accuracy.
This guide explains how to choose openings that work well in turn-based and correspondence chess, especially for adult players.
For the main portal, see: Turn-Based & Correspondence Chess Strategy.
In slow chess, good openings tend to be:
Openings that rely on traps or fast initiative lose much of their power when the opponent has time to think.
Some openings are excellent in fast chess, but less effective in turn-based play:
That doesn’t mean they are “bad” — only that they demand precision every move, which increases mental load over long games.
In correspondence chess, the opening should:
This aligns perfectly with: Planning & Prophylaxis in Slow Chess.
White benefits from openings that:
Common correspondence-friendly choices:
These openings reward understanding more than memorisation.
As Black, correspondence success often comes from:
Reliable correspondence choices include:
These openings reduce early risk and support long-term planning.
Correspondence players often have access to databases — but misuse them.
Instead of copying the most popular move:
The goal is understanding, not memorisation.
Playing the same openings repeatedly in correspondence chess:
This directly supports: Time Management in Turn-Based Chess.
In correspondence chess, the opening is not about gaining an advantage — it is about reaching a position you understand better than your opponent.
Clarity beats surprise.
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