Italian Game

1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4

1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4

The Italian Game is one of the oldest openings in recorded chess history. The move 3. Bc4 aims the bishop at the f7 pawn — the weakest point in Black's position, defended only by the king — and prepares rapid castling. For centuries it was considered a beginner's weapon, overshadowed by the Ruy López. But in the 21st century, engines and top players have revived the Italian as a genuine fighting weapon with rich middlegame complexity.

Magnus Carlsen in particular has played the Italian Game extensively at the top level, helping establish that it is not just a junior opening but a serious try for an edge.

The core idea

After 3. Bc4, White places the bishop on the longest open diagonal and keeps options open: the Giuoco Piano (3... Bc5), the Two Knights (3... Nf6), and various other replies all lead to different character. White's bishop on c4 stares at f7 throughout the early game, often conditioning Black's defensive decisions even when no direct attack is coming.

The Italian differs from the Ruy López in a key way: there is no pin on the c6 knight, so Black has more flexibility. In return, White's bishop is more actively placed and tactical shots around f7 are a recurring theme.

Main variations

Giuoco Piano — 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Bc5

The "quiet game" — though in practice it is anything but. Black mirrors White's bishop setup, and the position that results after 4. c3 Nf6 5. d4 exd4 6. cxd4 Bb4+ is one of the most theoretically rich positions in all of chess.

Modern grandmasters favour: - 4. c3 Nf6 5. d4 — classical main line; both sides fight for the centre with open lines - 4. d3 (Giuoco Pianissimo) — White builds slowly with Nbd2, c3, Bb3, and Re1; a strategic grind that has become popular at the elite level precisely because it avoids forced lines

The Giuoco Pianissimo has been Carlsen's main weapon for years. It looks harmless but creates difficult structural and prophylactic decisions for Black. White often ends up with a nagging long-term advantage.

Two Knights Defense — 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Nf6

Black immediately counterattacks with 3... Nf6, hitting e4 before White can consolidate. The most critical response is:

  • 4. Ng5 — White goes straight for f7. After 4... d5 5. exd5 Na5 Black attacks the bishop while White's knight sits awkwardly on g5. The position is extremely sharp, with the Fried Liver Attack (5... Nxd5 6. Nxf7) being the most dangerous sideline: White sacrifices the knight for a raging kingside attack.
  • 4. d4 exd4 5. 0-0 — the Urusov/Max Lange structures with piece play for the pawn
  • 4. d3 — quieter; often transposes to Giuoco Pianissimo structures

The Two Knights is a favourite club weapon because it offers Black real counterattacking chances — and the Fried Liver is one of the most exciting lines in all of chess.

Hungarian Defense — 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Be7

Black declines to fight for the centre and plays solid, passive chess. The Hungarian gives White an easy game but is solid — Black simply wants to develop and castle without complications. Not fashionable at the top level.

Evans Gambit — 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Bc5 4. b4

One of the most romantic gambits in chess history. White sacrifices b4 to blow open lines and seize the centre. After 4... Bxb4 5. c3 Ba5 6. d4, White has a huge centre and rapid development. Morphy and Chigorin loved it. Modern engines consider it unsound at the highest levels but it remains dangerous in practical play and is enjoyable to study.

Canonical games to study

  • Morphy – Duke of Brunswick, Paris 1858 — not technically Italian, but Opera Game shows the attacking philosophy behind 1.e4 e5 openings.
  • Kasparov – Topalov, Wijk aan Zee 1999 — not Italian either, but the aggressive piece-play logic transfers.
  • Carlsen – Anand, Stavanger 2019 — Giuoco Pianissimo; textbook modern treatment, converting a tiny positional edge.
  • So – Aronian, Stavanger 2018 — Giuoco Piano main line; sharp theoretical fight.
  • Morphy – Paulsen, New York 1857 — Evans Gambit; the romantic era at its finest.

Practical advice

  1. Choose between Giuoco Pianissimo and the sharp main line. The Pianissimo (4. d3) is excellent if you like slow positional squeezes. The 4. c3 5. d4 main line is better if you want open positions and tactics.
  2. Know the Fried Liver. Even if you never intend to play 4. Ng5, your opponents may try it against you. Work through the theory of 4... d5 5. exd5 Na5 and 5... Nxd5 6. Nxf7; it's instructive for both sides.
  3. f7 is always a target. In the Italian, tactical shots involving Bxf7+ or knight sacrifices on f7 recur constantly. Train pattern recognition for this early in your opening study.
  4. Against the Two Knights with 4. Ng5, know Black's best reply. The most principled response after 5. exd5 is 5... Na5 (attacking the bishop) rather than 5... Nxd5, which leads to the Fried Liver. 5... Na5 is objectively best; make sure you know the resulting positions.

Related openings

  • Ruy López — the other main 1. e4 e5 opening; more strategic and endgame-oriented.
  • Sicilian Defense — Black's sharpest reply to 1. e4; avoids Italian/Ruy territory entirely.

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