Compare BOT.vinnik Chess: Combination Lessons prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Deep Green Games. Published by Abyssal Studios. Released on 6/18/2020. Available on PC, Mac. Genres: Casual, Indie, Strategy.

A sarcastic Soviet AI drills you through 150+ combination puzzles across 19 chapters - cheap, focused, and surprisingly effective for anyone stuck between casual and club-level play.

I'll be upfront: I picked this up expecting a throwaway chess app and walked away with a genuinely useful training tool. BOT.vinnik Chess: Combination Lessons is a structured puzzle trainer built around tactical combinations, not a full chess engine or an all-in-one learning suite. The framing device is a sardonic Soviet robot instructor who mocks your mistakes with dry, retro-futurist humor, and that personality goes a long way toward making what is essentially rote drill work feel less like homework. The structure is methodical in a way I respect. The content is organized into 19 thematic chapters covering specific combination concepts, and every puzzle has exactly one correct answer: the best move. There is no branching analysis for wrong moves, which is a deliberate design choice worth understanding before you buy. The game is not trying to simulate the full tree of possibilities - it is trying to burn correct pattern recognition into your brain through repetition and theory context given before each puzzle set. For players who already know how the pieces move and want to stop blundering combinations in the middlegame, that focused scope is a feature, not a limitation. Absolute beginners expecting a ground-up tutorial will be disappointed; the game states clearly it assumes you already know the rules. The aesthetic leans hard into an 80s green-on-black terminal look, which is either charming or grating depending on your tolerance for retro affectation. I found it appropriate for the tone. The UI is minimal and mouse-driven, with immediate feedback when you play a correct move. Steam user sentiment sits at 92% positive across over a hundred reviews, which for a niche educational tool is a signal worth taking seriously. Community feedback has pointed out occasional achievement-tracking bugs and some translation roughness in certain lesson explanations, so expect minor rough edges in a few of the 19 chapters. Where Combination Lessons earns its place in a serious player's toolkit is in the economy of its design. It does one thing - teach you to spot tactical combinations through guided repetition - and does it consistently. Players who grind through the full chapter set report measurable improvement in board vision and multi-move calculation, which is exactly the skill gap between a casual player and someone who can hold their own in a club setting. The follow-up modules in the BOT.vinnik series (Winning Patterns, Opening Traps, the USSR Championships sets) suggest Deep Green Games has built a coherent curriculum here, and Combination Lessons is the logical entry point. The honest ceiling is this: once you finish the 150-plus puzzles and clear the chapters, there is no procedurally generated replay value, no Elo-tracked daily puzzle mode, no opponent to face. It is a finite course, not a platform. Treat it like a focused workbook you work through once, take the pattern recognition gains, and move on to the next module or a proper sparring engine. Diego, Scout Team

BOT.vinnik Chess: Combination Lessons
CasualIndieStrategy

BOT.vinnik Chess: Combination Lessons

Jun 18, 2020Deep Green GamesAbyssal Studios
GamerScout Says

A sarcastic Soviet AI drills you through 150+ combination puzzles across 19 chapters - cheap, focused, and surprisingly effective for anyone stuck between casual and club-level play.

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About BOT.vinnik Chess: Combination Lessons

I'll be upfront: I picked this up expecting a throwaway chess app and walked away with a genuinely useful training tool. BOT.vinnik Chess: Combination Lessons is a structured puzzle trainer built around tactical combinations, not a full chess engine or an all-in-one learning suite. The framing device is a sardonic Soviet robot instructor who mocks your mistakes with dry, retro-futurist humor, and that personality goes a long way toward making what is essentially rote drill work feel less like homework. The structure is methodical in a way I respect. The content is organized into 19 thematic chapters covering specific combination concepts, and every puzzle has exactly one correct answer: the best move. There is no branching analysis for wrong moves, which is a deliberate design choice worth understanding before you buy. The game is not trying to simulate the full tree of possibilities - it is trying to burn correct pattern recognition into your brain through repetition and theory context given before each puzzle set. For players who already know how the pieces move and want to stop blundering combinations in the middlegame, that focused scope is a feature, not a limitation. Absolute beginners expecting a ground-up tutorial will be disappointed; the game states clearly it assumes you already know the rules. The aesthetic leans hard into an 80s green-on-black terminal look, which is either charming or grating depending on your tolerance for retro affectation. I found it appropriate for the tone. The UI is minimal and mouse-driven, with immediate feedback when you play a correct move. Steam user sentiment sits at 92% positive across over a hundred reviews, which for a niche educational tool is a signal worth taking seriously. Community feedback has pointed out occasional achievement-tracking bugs and some translation roughness in certain lesson explanations, so expect minor rough edges in a few of the 19 chapters. Where Combination Lessons earns its place in a serious player's toolkit is in the economy of its design. It does one thing - teach you to spot tactical combinations through guided repetition - and does it consistently. Players who grind through the full chapter set report measurable improvement in board vision and multi-move calculation, which is exactly the skill gap between a casual player and someone who can hold their own in a club setting. The follow-up modules in the BOT.vinnik series (Winning Patterns, Opening Traps, the USSR Championships sets) suggest Deep Green Games has built a coherent curriculum here, and Combination Lessons is the logical entry point. The honest ceiling is this: once you finish the 150-plus puzzles and clear the chapters, there is no procedurally generated replay value, no Elo-tracked daily puzzle mode, no opponent to face. It is a finite course, not a platform. Treat it like a focused workbook you work through once, take the pattern recognition gains, and move on to the next module or a proper sparring engine. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstier:sub-5Chess PuzzlesTactical TrainingPattern RecognitionRetro AestheticFinite CourseIntermediate Skill FloorMouse OnlyEducational Tool

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP/Vista/7/8
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
100 MB available space
Graphics
Graphics card supporting DirectX 9.0c
Processor
2 Ghz Dual Core
Sound Card
Any

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Game Info

Developer
Deep Green Games
Publisher
Abyssal Studios
Release Date
Jun 18, 2020

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2026-06-100.60(lowest)

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What platforms is BOT.vinnik Chess: Combination Lessons available on?

BOT.vinnik Chess: Combination Lessons is available on PC, Mac.

When was BOT.vinnik Chess: Combination Lessons released?

BOT.vinnik Chess: Combination Lessons was released on 18 June 2020.

Who developed BOT.vinnik Chess: Combination Lessons?

BOT.vinnik Chess: Combination Lessons was developed by Deep Green Games and published by Abyssal Studios.