Get The Maximum Advantage From
Minimum Opening Theory With This
Structure-Based Repertoire
100 Repertoires: King's Indian Attack shortcuts the opening phase with an evergreen setup — then simplifies your quest for an edge with thematic plans you can rinse and repeat.At the core of the repertoire is the King’s Indian structure — which you
will get on the board against nearly
any move-order by Black.
Here’s how:
First, you’ll start with the flexible
1.Nf3 which rules out …e7-e5. Next, you’ll take control of the a8-h1 diagonal with
2.g3 and
3.Bg2, then follow up with the logical
4.O-O.
And finally, you’ll play
5.d3 preparing to break through the center with your e-pawn.

The King’s Indian Attack’s starting position
In just 5 moves, you have…
✅ A safe, castled king
✅ A fully mobilized kingside
✅ And an airtight setup with excellent knockout potential!
11th World Champion
Bobby Fischer and history’s best chess trainer,
Mark Dvoretsky, have produced sparkling tactical gems with the King’s Indian Attack.
And even at the 2400 to 2500-Elo level, the structure above scores
up to 62%, which is head and shoulders ahead of White’s usual 54% win rate.
If you like the sound of that, then join
Grandmaster Arturs Neiksans as he lays down…
The Repeatable Tactics And Strategies
For Winning With The King’s Indian Attack
Neiksans is a 4-time Latvian champion with a peak rating of 2631 FIDE. He’s also a King’s Indian Attack specialist, with a 63.6% win rate in the opening from 2013 to 2022.
In
100 Repertoires: King's Indian Attack, Neiksans passes his hard-earned mastery to you…
Including the thematic tactics, middlegame structures, and standard strategies…
So that you can improvise, and find the best move in almost any scenario. All while keeping the must-know theory down to
just 100 MoveTrainer® variations.
The 4 main chapters show you how to reorganize your flexible setup — so that it cuts straight across Black’s plan.
You’ll pounce on the weak squares left behind by ambitious pawn advances…

Advancing the black pawn to e5 allowed Nf5,
hitting those weak dark squares
Take over the center against solid but passive play…

Black’s pawn triangle might be tough to crack,
but your center gives you the simpler
and more active game anyway
And launch the opening’s signature attack that almost plays itself!

The g5-breakthrough is coming, while
the enemy king is light on defenders
You'll also find
a backup mini-repertoire starting with 1.e4, which was Fischer's preferred method of reaching the King's Indian Attack.
The alternative lines not only deepen your understanding of the opening. It also offers an easy way to add the King's Indian Attack to your repertoire, if you already play 1.e4.
Beyond the move-by-move analysis, Neiksans also lays down the
12 most important structures coming out of the King’s Indian Attack — plus strategic guidelines for maximizing your results in each structure.
You’ll learn:
✅ When to advance your pawn to e5. Push the pawn too early, and you’ll lose it. Nail the timing however, and your kingside domination is all but guaranteed.
✅ Predict where the enemy king will castle… so you can prepare to attack that wing.
✅ Set up devastating sacrifices on h6… while preventing Black from breaking out of their cramp.
✅ Knock the wind out of Black’s queenside counterplay… with a weird rook move. So you can pounce on the enemy VIP without looking back.
✅ Plus simple “if, then” formulas which conserve your energy and thinking time — so that you’ll have plenty of both when the game reaches its critical point.
We’re confident that
100 Repertoires: King’s Indian Attack can cut down your opening study workload down to size…
And at the same time, give you a pleasant game where you call the shots — or even an outright advantage.
But don’t take our word for it. Sign up for the course to see for yourself.
You’ll be covered by
our 30-day “love it or your money back” guarantee. So if you decide that Neiksans’ King’s Indian Attack isn’t for you, no matter the reason, we’ll rush you a refund. No questions asked.
Let’s go!