Torre Attack
A solid queen pawn system where White develops the bishop to g5 before playing e3, creating a flexible setup with quiet pressure.
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Contenido de la lección
The Queen's Pawn opening — White claims the center with the d-pawn, which is immediately defended by the queen. This tends to lead to more strategic, closed positions compared to 1. e4. Black's main responses: - 1. ..d5 — Queen's Gambit and Slav setups - 1. ..Nf6 — Indian Defenses (King's Indian, Nimzo-Indian, etc.) - 1. ..f5 — Dutch Defense
Black develops the knight and controls e4, preventing White from building the ideal e4+d4 center easily. This is the gateway to all Indian Defense systems. Black delays committing a pawn structure, staying flexible to choose between King's Indian, Nimzo-Indian, Queen's Indian, and more.
White develops the knight to its most natural square, supporting d4 and controlling e5. By choosing 2. Nf3 over 2. c4, White keeps a flexible setup that can lead to the Torre Attack, London System, or Colle System. The knight on f3 also prepares kingside castling.
Jugadas alternativas
Black prepares ..d5 and keeps options open for the bishop on f8. This flexible move can lead to many openings — the Queen's Gambit Declined, Nimzo-Indian, or Queen's Indian depending on how play develops. The downside is that the light-squared bishop is now blocked behind the e6 pawn.
The defining move of the Torre Attack! White develops the dark-squared bishop to an active square before playing e3, which would lock it in. The bishop pins the Nf6 against Black's queen and puts immediate pressure on the kingside. This move must come before e3 — once the e-pawn advances, the bishop would be permanently trapped behind it. White's alternatives here lead to different systems: - 3. Bf4 — the London System - 3. c4 — transposing to main-line Queen's Gambit territory - 3. e3 — the Colle System, but the bishop is locked in
Jugadas alternativas
Black stakes a claim in the center with ..d5, establishing a classical pawn structure. This is the most principled response — challenging White's d4 pawn and gaining central space. Alternatively, Black could play ..h6 immediately to challenge the bishop, but ..d5 develops more naturally.
Jugadas alternativas
Now that the bishop is safely on g5, White plays e3 to solidify the d4 pawn and create a sturdy pawn chain. The center becomes very stable with pawns on d4 and e3. This is the classic Torre setup — the bishop got out before e3 closed the diagonal. White will develop the remaining pieces behind this solid center.
Jugadas alternativas
Black develops the bishop to a modest but solid square. On e7 the bishop breaks the pin on the Nf6 knight and prepares to castle kingside. The bishop on e7 is not as active as on d6 or b4, but it's the most natural square in this pawn structure.
White develops the knight to d2 rather than c3, which is a hallmark of the Torre/Colle family of openings. From d2 the knight supports e4 — White's key central break — and can reroute to f1-g3 or e5 later. Placing the knight on d2 instead of c3 keeps the c-pawn free to advance to c3, supporting d4.
Jugadas alternativas
Black develops the knight to d7, a typical square in Queen's Pawn structures. The knight supports the Nf6 and prepares ..c5, the thematic central counter-strike. From d7 the knight can also reroute to f8-g6 for kingside defense or to b6-c4 to target White's queenside.
White reinforces the d4 pawn, creating an extra-solid pawn triangle on c3-d4-e3. This prevents any ..c5xd4 exchange from creating structural weaknesses and prepares to answer ..c5 with the center remaining intact. With c3, White's entire center is rock-solid.
Black strikes at White's center with the thematic ..c5 break. This is the standard way to challenge the d4 pawn in Queen's Pawn structures. Black aims to create counterplay and open lines before White completes development and launches a kingside initiative.
The bishop develops to its ideal diagonal, pointing at the kingside — particularly the h7 square near Black's king. On d3 the bishop supports the future e4 pawn break and creates potential attacking chances. This is a key piece in the Torre Attack's plan: Bd3 + Qe2 + e4 is a common setup to generate central and kingside pressure.
Black finally challenges the bishop on g5, asking it to declare its intentions. This is a useful move — Black needs to know whether the bishop will retreat or exchange on f6. The move also gains a useful escape square on h7 for the king and prevents any future Bg5-h4-g3 maneuvers from creating back-rank threats.
White retreats the bishop to h4, maintaining the pin on the Nf6 knight along the h4-d8 diagonal. The bishop remains active and keeps pressure on Black's position. The alternative Bxf6 would trade a bishop for a knight and relieve Black's cramped position. Keeping the bishop maintains the tension.
Jugadas alternativas
Black castles kingside to safety. The king is now secure and the rook is connected. With the pin on Nf6 still in place, Black will need to find the right moment to break free. Castling also activates the f8 rook, which can later move to support the ..c5 break via the c-file.
White also castles, tucking the king away and connecting the rooks. With all minor pieces developed and both sides castled, the opening phase is nearly complete. From here, White's plan revolves around the e4 break — pushing e4 to open the center and activate pieces toward Black's king.
Black places the queen on c7, a multipurpose square. The queen supports the ..c5 pawn, eyes the c-file for potential pressure, and vacates d8 so the rooks can connect. The queen on c7 also prevents White's Nf3-e5 jump in some lines, as the knight would be challenged.
White completes the classic Torre Attack setup with Qe2. The queen supports the e4 pawn break and connects with the bishop on d3 to create potential kingside threats. The next step in the plan is to play e4, opening the center when the time is right. After e4 dxe4 Nxe4, White's pieces become very active.
Jugadas alternativas
Puntos clave
- Bg5 must come before e3 — the whole point is developing the bishop actively first
- Nbd2 (not Nc3) keeps the c-pawn free to support d4 with c3
- The e4 break is White's main plan — Bd3 + Qe2 + e4 generates central and kingside pressure
- The solid c3-d4-e3 pawn triangle gives White a risk-free, flexible position
- White maintains the Bh4 pin as long as possible to keep pressure on Black's kingside