ECO: E80
Advanced
Indian Defenses

King's IndianSämisch Variation

King's Indian: Sämisch Variation explained with a playable board, exact move order, practical plans for White and Black, key pawn breaks, transpositions, common mistakes, training checklist, FAQs, and ChessAlgo analysis links.

Moves 1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 g6 3. Nc3 Bg7 4. e4 d6 5. f3

9
Starting Moves
E80
ECO Code
Advanced
Position Profile
Be3 / Qd2
Main Plans

♟ Quick Answer

The King's Indian: Sämisch Variation is a Indian Defenses opening under ECO E80. It starts with 1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 g6 3. Nc3 Bg7 4. e4 d6 5. f3. The goal is not only to memorize the moves but to understand the center, development scheme, pawn breaks, and typical middlegame plan.

King's Indian: Sämisch Variation Overview

The King's Indian: Sämisch Variation belongs to the Indian Defenses family. Indian defenses often delay direct central occupation and attack the center with pieces and pawn breaks. The positions can become strategic, dynamic, or kingside-focused depending on the exact setup.

Learning note: The percentage bars are learning-profile estimates, not official database statistics. Real results change by rating level, time control, and game database. Use them as a study profile, not as proof that one side is objectively winning.

At a Glance

Best forAdvanced learners
Core skillPlans over memorization
Main focusCenter + king safety
Practice methodReplay → analyze → repeat

Key Strategic Ideas

Pawn Structure

Identify which central pawns define the position and which pawn breaks can change the game.

Piece Development

Develop pieces toward active squares before starting a direct attack or grabbing material.

Key Lines

Watch open files, diagonals, and weak squares created by the first few moves.

King Safety

Castle at the right moment and avoid opening lines near your king without compensation.

Plans for White

  • Build the center with d4 and c4, but be ready to defend it.
  • Prepare central expansion before Black's pawn breaks arrive.
  • Keep pieces coordinated so the center does not become a target.
  • Avoid blocking the fianchetto bishop by keeping the pawn structure clean.
  • Look for central breaks like e4-e5 when Black overextends.
  • Play actively — passive defense against Indian Defense counterplay is difficult.

Plans for Black

  • Attack White's center with pieces and pawn breaks, not passive defense.
  • Prepare …c5, …e5, or …d5 based on the specific pawn structure.
  • Do not allow White to expand without creating counter-pressure.
  • Use the knight on f6 actively to pressure White's center.
  • Avoid moving the same pawn twice without a clear purpose.
  • Look for moments when the center becomes loose and White's pawns can be targeted.

Move-by-Move Breakdown

1.d4White
1…Nf6Black
2.c4White
2…g6Black
3.Nc3White
3…Bg7Black
4.e4White
4…d6Black
5.f3White

Typical Pawn Breaks

  • e4/e5 or d5 for White when space is supported
  • …c5 and …e5 as Black's main center strikes
  • Kingside pawn storms only after the center is understood

Common Mistakes

  • Building a large center but failing to defend it against piece attacks.
  • Allowing the opponent's pawn break without preparation.
  • Treating the position like a quiet opening when it can become tactical.

Opening Profile

White side

44%

Draw

32%

Black side

24%

How to Train This Opening

  1. Replay the move order on the board until you can reach the opening structure without looking.
  2. Name the main plan for White and the main counter-plan for Black before studying any variations.
  3. Play three slow training games using this opening and note where the position became unclear.
  4. Use the ChessAlgo calculator after each training game to compare candidate moves.
  5. Save critical positions with the FEN Chess guide for later review.
  6. Add one common mistake and one typical pawn break to your personal opening notes.

Position Checklist Before You Leave the Opening

King safe?Pieces developed?Center understood?Pawn break ready?Worst piece improved?Opponent threat checked?

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Alex Torres

Written and engine-checked by

Alex Torres

FIDE-Rated Chess Analyst · Engine Specialist · Founder, ChessAlgo.com

Alex Torres is a FIDE-rated chess player and Stockfish analysis specialist with 15+ years of competitive play and 8 years of private coaching experience. Based in Madrid, Spain, he founded ChessAlgo.com to make practical engine analysis faster, cleaner, and easier for every player.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the King's Indian: Sämisch Variation?
The King's Indian: Sämisch Variation is a chess opening classified as ECO E80. It begins with 1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 g6 3. Nc3 Bg7 4. e4 d6 5. f3 and should be studied through its move order, pawn structure, and typical plans for both sides.
Is the King's Indian: Sämisch Variation good for beginners?
It can be useful for beginners if they focus on development, king safety, and the main pawn breaks instead of memorizing long theory first.
What is the main idea of the King's Indian: Sämisch Variation?
The main idea is to reach a playable structure where both sides understand their development scheme, central control, and most important counterplay plan.
How should I practice the King's Indian: Sämisch Variation?
Replay the moves, learn the plans for both sides, play slow training games, then review the resulting positions with ChessAlgo to improve candidate-move selection.
Should I memorize every line in the King's Indian: Sämisch Variation?
No. Start with the core move order and the common plans. Add deeper variations only after you understand the structure and typical mistakes.
What should I check after the King's Indian: Sämisch Variation ends?
Check king safety, piece activity, central tension, weak squares, open files, and whether your pawn breaks are prepared.
What ECO code is the King's Indian: Sämisch Variation?
The King's Indian: Sämisch Variation is classified under ECO code E80 in the standard Encyclopaedia of Chess Openings system.
Can the King's Indian: Sämisch Variation transpose into other openings?
Yes. Many openings in the Indian Defenses family share move orders and can transpose. Understanding the pawn structure matters more than knowing which transposition occurred.