Vienna Game for White – Top-Level Repertoire + PGN August 9, 2025
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| Category | PREMIUM CHESS VIDEO, Modern Chess |
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Vienna Game for White – Creativity Anchored in Precision
The Vienna Game has long been a curious sideline in 1.e4 theory—sharp enough to tempt, but often considered too thin to rely on at a high level. That perception changes here. In Vienna Game for White – Top-Level Repertoire, GM Baadur Jobava and GM Pier Luigi Basso have built a complete, tournament-ready repertoire based on 1.e4 e5 2.Nc3, fusing inventive attacking ideas with rigorous analytical backing.

Jobava is known worldwide for his originality and fearlessness, willing to step into positions that unsettle even the best-prepared opponents. Basso brings the other half of the equation: a methodical, detail-driven approach that tests every creative spark against objective evaluation. Together, they’ve re-engineered the Vienna into an opening system that is strategically sound, tactically rich, and adaptable for serious competition.
Why the Vienna Game Works in 2025
Modern elite chess preparation often funnels into the same heavily analyzed positions—the Berlin, the Giuoco Pianissimo, the Marshall. The Vienna sidesteps these theoretical highways entirely while keeping White’s play principled. After 2.Nc3, White can adopt aggressive structures, steer the game into flexible maneuvering battles, or even provoke early imbalances to unsettle opponents accustomed to rote engine lines.
This repertoire focuses on using the Vienna to dictate the type of middlegame reached, not just to survive the opening. That’s why the recommendations often carry more than one plan: in some positions, you might attack the kingside immediately; in others, you delay pawn breaks and play for long-term pressure.
Concrete Highlights from the Repertoire
Against 2…Bc5, the course introduces the underused 3.Qh5, a move seen fewer than a dozen times in serious practice. Far from a gimmick, it’s backed by detailed preparation. If Black responds with 3…Nc6, White switches to a flexible setup with Bc4 and Nf3, keeping the queen active while avoiding concessions.
In the mainline 1.e4 e5 2.Nc3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Nf6 4.d3 Bc5 5.f4, the authors show how to combine central control with the thematic pawn break e5.

One sample idea: after …d6, White calmly plays Nf3, Qe2, and castles long—plans more typical of the King’s Indian Attack, but here adapted to Vienna structures. This crossover of ideas makes the repertoire unpredictable even for well-prepared opponents.
When facing 4…Na5, a move designed to trade off the dangerous light-squared bishop, the recommendation is 5.Bb3 followed by a quick f4.

The point is to accept the temporary loss of the bishop pair in exchange for fast pawn storms and open-file play—an approach that turns a defensive attempt by Black into a dynamic battle.
Basso’s Defensive Blueprints
Basso’s influence is clear in the repertoire’s coverage of solid and “anti-theory” options. In lines like 2…Nf6 3.d4 exd4 4.Qxd4 Nc6 5.Qd3, the course doesn’t just chase initiative—it offers multiple safe, equalizing routes for White if a sharp fight isn’t required. This flexibility is valuable for players building a main repertoire around the Vienna, as it allows them to adapt to tournament situations.
His precision also shines in the coverage of 4…Bb4, where Black tries for early central pressure.

The suggested system keeps development simple—Nge2 followed by 0-0 and f2-f4. Black should play very precisely in order to equalize.
A Complete Training Package
The course is structured for both deep study and quick practical use:
10 theoretical chapters covering all major and minor Black replies to 2.Nc3
30 interactive test positions designed to train Vienna-specific decision-making
A Memory Booster to internalize essential moves and plans
Basso’s 15-minute quick repertoire for last-minute preparation
Over 3 hours and 20 minutes of video content, alternating between creative attacking concepts and clean, technical solutions
Every element is built to reinforce understanding of Vienna structures, not just memorization of sequences.
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