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Slav Defense
d4 d5 c4 c6 Nc3Black defense. The named position is usually reached after d4 d5 2. c4 c6 3. Nc3 and tends to produce solid practical play.
Theory 48
Games 520K
Family Slav Defense
Opening Profile
Sharpness30
Solidity72
Counterplay66
BeginnerPlayable, but easier once the basic tactical and structural themes of the opening family already make sense.
ClubReliable club opening once you know the first branching points and the main middlegame plan.
AdvancedMore of a practical repertoire branch than a lifetime theory project, but still worth knowing well.
Black defense. The named position is usually reached after d4 d5 2. c4 c6 3. Nc3 and tends to produce solid practical play.
White's Plans
Use the first moves to ask Black whether the setup can hold its structure once development accelerates.
Track the c- and e-pawn breaks closely because they usually decide whether White gets a squeeze or just equal tension.
Improve the worst-placed piece first so the opening edge turns into a usable middlegame advantage.
Black's Plans
Coordinate the position first, then choose the central or wing break that makes White's setup uncomfortable.
Equalize development cleanly and only then release the tension with the freeing pawn break.
Do not confuse solidity with passivity; the opening works best when the position stays compact but active.
Win Rate Across All Games
48% White6.7% Draw45.3% Black
520K
Games
48
Theory Depth
5
Main Line Ply
Typical Structures
Queen's-pawn tension where cxd5, e4, or ...c5 decisions define the character of the middlegame.
Piece placement matters because the structure stays stable for a long time once the tension resolves.
Key Motifs
Typical tactical ideas come from central breaks and the first undeveloped piece in the structure.
Queen's-pawn structures where the right central break matters more than immediate tactics.
Slow-burn middlegames where small structural concessions and piece quality decide the game.
What Usually Goes Wrong
Players often drift into passivity by assuming a solid structure will play itself.
Move Order & Transpositions
This page combines catalog reference data with ChessRef study notes rather than a fully expanded guide.
How to Prepare
Memorize the first 5 ply and the first branching decision, not just the catalog name.
Review the related openings and transpositions so alternate move orders do not hide the same structure from you.
Collect a few of your own games in the line and annotate the middlegame plans before adding more theory.
It stops fitting if you want Black positions that create instant imbalance without a patient middlegame plan.
See This In Your Games
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