Garry focuses on pawn endgames and the drama they can create. The discussion includes analysis of a decisive mistake, strong attacks, tactical motifs, and a powerful yet quiet move that came at a rare early stage of the game. Garry dissects his opening against Vishy Anand in 1995. “No, I didn’t see that line.” Garry points out a line that Dennis missed and shows how he created the illusion of an attack without any real threat. From there, Garry talks through how he developed his pieces and explains how Molly could have created more discomfort for him. “It seems like the whole army is coming for me.” After Molly opens with the Sicilian, Garry counters with a quiet move. “What else can you do?” Garry breaks down Jason’s moves and answers questions about what his opponent could have done differently. With a time control of 30 minutes, watch Garry take on three players with ratings of 1266, 1515, and 2103. He brought abandoned openings back from the dead and built a database of almost 20,000 different analyses-but Garry believes there are still more ideas to surface. What happens when your opponent plays your opening? How do you find a satisfying opening both psychologically and strategically? Is there such a thing as universal opening advice? Learn when and how he grew his repertoire. Garry played e4 as a child prodigy and stuck with that move as the under-18 chess champion of the USSR and under-20 champion of the world.