The moves you’ll play
- 1.d4Nf6
- 2.Bf4e6
- 3.e3b6
- 4.Nf3Bb7
- 5.Bd3Be7
- 6.Nbd2O-O
- 7.O-O
The line continues — master it move by move in the app.
Your coach, move by move
- 1. d4We take the center and commit to our flexible London structure.
- 2. Bf4We shore up d4 and free the light-squared bishop for active development.
- 3. e3We post the bishop on the active b1-h7 diagonal, eyeing Black's king and controlling the key e4-square against the ...Bb7 plan.
- +2 more coached moves waiting in the app
Key ideas behind this line
- Build the classic London pawn triangle (d4, e3, c3) and get the dark-squared bishop out to f4 before playing e3, so it stays active outside the chain.
- When Black hits the bishop with ...Bd6, retreat Bf4-g3 to preserve your good bishop rather than trade it off.
- Aim for the e5 outpost: plant a knight there with Ne5 (supported by Nbd2 and f4), then attack the king with f4, Rf3-h3 or Qf3.
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More lines in this opening
Modern London: Main Line vs ...d5 (Ne4 Setup)
The most critical mainline: Black mirrors with ...Bd6 to challenge the London bishop, and White keeps the structure intact with Bg3, completing the harmonious c3/Nbd2/Bd3 setup before deciding on a kingside or central break.
London vs ...d5: Classical ...Bf5 / ...e6
A standard symmetrical-type position where White finishes development and prepares to castle; the plan is Ne5, f4, and a slow kingside buildup once Black commits.
London vs King's Indian Setup (...g6)
Against a King's Indian-style fianchetto, White plays h3 to keep the Bf4 safe from ...Nh5, develops modestly, and aims for a sound e3/Be2 structure with a later c4 or e4 break.
London vs Indian Defense: ...c5 Counterstrike
Black challenges with an early ...c5; after the exchange White gets a slightly open Carlsbad-type structure with a strong bishop on f4 and easy development.
Jobava-style? No — London vs ...Bf5 Symmetry
When Black mirrors our bishop with ...Bf5, White transposes to a favorable Slav-like structure with c4 and Qb3, pressuring b7 and the queenside since Black's bishop has left the b8-h2 diagonal.
London vs ...c5 and ...Qb6 Counterattack
Black's aggressive ...Qb6 hits b2; White declines to defend passively and instead develops Nc3 and jumps to b5 hitting the c7-square, generating concrete counterplay rather than crawling back.
London vs Dutch-Style ...f5
Against a Dutch setup White keeps the London structure; with the bishop already developed to f4, the e5-outpost is ideal and White plants a knight there to dominate the dark squares.
London vs ...e6 and ...Bd6 Trade Attempt
Black tries to trade dark-squared bishops early with ...Bd6; White sidesteps with Bg3 and keeps the powerful London bishop, reaching the full harmonious setup.
London vs Chigorin-Style ...Nc6
Black plays an active ...Nc6 and ...Bf5; White switches to a c4-based plan, pressuring d5 and b7 while developing naturally, since the early ...Nc6 blocks Black's c-pawn.
London vs ...g6 with Aggressive Qb3
An ambitious anti-fianchetto line: with Nc3 and the bishop on f4, White launches an immediate h4-h5 pawn storm against Black's castled king before completing development.
London vs Slow ...e6/...Be7 (Quiet Main)
Against Black's modest ...Be7 setup, White completes the London and immediately occupies the e5-outpost, the springboard for a kingside attack with f4 and Qf3/Rf3.
London vs ...c5/...cxd4 with Nc3 Recapture Plan
Black hits b2 with ...Qb6; White offers a queen trade with Qb3, and when Black locks the queenside with ...c4, White calmly regroups the queen, keeping a sound position with the strong f4-bishop.
London vs Grünfeld-Style ...d5 and ...g6
Black combines the fianchetto with an early ...d5 and ...c5; White stays solid with c3 and Nbd2, holding the center and preparing Ne5 or a later dxc5 to fix structure.
London vs ...d6/...Nbd7 Old Indian Setup
Black aims for an Old Indian ...e5 break; White exchanges in the center to reach an open position where the f4/g3 bishop and quick development give comfortable equality-plus.
London vs Symmetrical ...Bf5 and ...e6 (Carlsbad Plan)
Black trades light-squared bishops; White recaptures with the queen for active centralization, then exchanges dark-squared bishops too, leaving a structurally sound, slightly easier middlegame to play.