Calculate Forcing Lines
Bacrot games often reward direct tactical vision. List checks, captures, and threats before settling on a candidate move.
Study Bacrot games through interactive Guess the Move training. Play through Etienne Bacrot's wins, practice sharp calculation, opening confidence, and practical attacking decisions, and track your score and accuracy.

Choose a Bacrot game, play through the winning side's moves, and return here to review your score and accuracy. This table is built for players who want to study Bacrot games actively instead of replaying them passively.
| Game | Event | Year | Moves | Played | Current move | Score | Correct | Accuracy | Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Judit Polgar - Etienne Bacrot 0-1 | Rapid Match, Bastia FRA | 1999 | 74 | No | - | - | - | - | Start |
Viktor Antonovich Bologan - Etienne Bacrot 0-1 | Enghien-les-Bains FRA, It | 2001 | 30 | No | - | - | - | - | Start |
Etienne Bacrot - Peter Leko 1-0 | Elista Grand Prix, Elista RUS | 2008 | 31 | No | - | - | - | - | Start |
Etienne Bacrot - Levon Aronian 1-0 | European Team Championship, Novi Sad SRB | 2009 | 36 | No | - | - | - | - | Start |
Etienne Bacrot - Shakhriyar Mamedyarov 1-0 | 4th FIDE Grand Prix, Nalchik RUS | 2009 | 31 | No | - | - | - | - | Start |
Bacrot games often reward direct tactical vision. List checks, captures, and threats before settling on a candidate move.
Look for how opening choices create middlegame targets, piece activity, and chances to seize the initiative.
When an attack breaks through, keep calculating until the advantage is stable rather than stopping after the first good move.
Study Bacrot games slowly. Write down your candidate moves, choose one move, and only then compare your decision with the game. The value comes from noticing why a great player preferred one plan over another.
This page is a focused entry point for players looking for Bacrot games, ways to study Bacrot games, world champion game study, and online Guess the Move chess practice.
Bacrot Games are interactive Guess the Move lessons built from Etienne Bacrot's games. Instead of replaying the moves passively, you study Bacrot games by choosing the move you think the player played.
Choose a game from the table, calculate candidate moves before each turn, play your move on the board, and then compare it with the historical game move, engine feedback, score, and accuracy.
Yes. The table shows completed games, resumable games, current move, score, correct moves, and accuracy when progress data is available.
Start from the Bacrot games table above, or use the main Guess the Move trainer to choose a master game and begin move-by-move training.