00:00It's a game that is transparent from both ends.
00:05And if you have your plans, you should try to make sure that the opponent doesn't realize what the danger is coming from too early.
00:16Some of the ideas are quite open and apparent.
00:20Some of them could be hidden.
00:23Sometimes you can move on one side of the board by disguising your true intentions.
00:30That already involves psychology.
00:34Because you have to remember that some of your plans may not work out if an opponent prevents them from happening.
00:43So that's why maybe having kind of destruction, psychological destruction on the other side of the board, could help you to move forward more effectively.
00:52Even if you waste time by doing something in the secondary front, but destructing your opponent and subverting his or her attention might be extremely productive.
01:06In many cases, you don't have a winning or losing move.
01:17So you look at the moves that some of them are probably more solid.
01:25They're more up to demand of the position, which means, you know, if you are under pressure, you better, you know, defend yourself without making aggressive moves.
01:35Because the problem is that some of these moves that are logical and you may call them positional, they're expected by your opponent.
01:44And if you want to change the nature of the game, if you want to make it sharper, if you want to create something that's less comfortable for your opponent,
01:56then you move on with the moves that you want to make it sharper.