Leave ideas here but my current ideas based on your guys' discussion are: Choosing candidate moves and picking between them (calculation + time management) Endgame Activity!!! More Caro Kann (Which will be releasing slowly anyways)
The fundamentals of punishing "bad" openings and random moves which probably ties into learning to be flexible and adapting to your opponent How to mentally recover after blundering and making your opponent earn the win I'm also interested in seeing more about the Vienna, or at least the "Vienna structure" where you play it against things like the Modern (which I recall happening in one of your speedrun videos a while ago) as a sort of supplemental video to learn from along with your Vienna video that's up on YouTube
Hello to everyone joining! Please join the discussion by letting us know a bit about yourself and what your goal is with chess currently - are you looking to play your first OTB tournament?
@Alexander Iskauskas Calculation could definitely be a part of it, it sort of ties into being careless and not thinking because I'll make a quick calculation, assume that it's correct and make the move that I calculated. And when I do take the time to calculate, it tends to eat up too much of my clock and I force myself to move faster but also without thinking