Explode Into Action Versus 1.d4
Short & Sweet: Bok’s Nimzo-Indian wastes no time in landing the first hit — busting the position open with pawn levers, invading with dynamic pieces, and sacrificing material to back the opponent against the wall.It’s a sampler from
Lifetime Repertoires: Nimzo-Queen’s Indian by
Grandmaster Benjamin Bok.
The full repertoire plays for dynamic, tactics-rich positions where you have plenty of opportunities to crank up the pressure.
While the computer will always say “equal,” the first player must always tread lightly — or risk getting blown away with a prepared combination!
Inside this
Short & Sweet, Bok presents 10 exhilarating variations from his repertoire which are…
A Mini-Masterclass On Dynamic Play
And Imposing Your Will On The Game
Here’s the plan:
After
1.d4, you’ll bring out your kingside pieces as fast as possible with
1…Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 Bb4 — so you can castle to safety on the very next move.

Starting position of the Nimzo-Indian
The previous moves are all just a prelude to the upcoming battle.
With your lead in development and safer king, you’ll be ready to pry open the position — bring the rest of your pieces into the game — and start hammering White’s position before they can coordinate.
For starters, you will:
⚡ Sacrifice your queen in exchange for two minor pieces and a sustained attack on the light squares.
⚡ Pitch a pawn to enable your knights and rooks to develop with tempo.
⚡ And offer a rook so you can drive your c-pawn into the heart of the enemy position.
Best part? All of these exciting, cutting-edge ideas are 100% sound.
Everything’s packed into
10 MoveTrainer variations and
30 minutes of video. So you can start playing Bok’s Nimzo-Indian in the shortest time possible.
Then, if you like what you see, sign up for the full course and land the first strike against 1.d4!