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Chesstips is a French-language daily chess learning email service built around the idea of “improving in 2 minutes a day.” After subscribing to the newsletter, users receive one chess tip every day and also get a free white paper on the rules of chess. The page clearly emphasizes that the content is free, making it suitable for players who want to maintain a regular training routine in short, spare moments.
Its core format is email: each email contains a corrected exercise and case analysis, along with elements for exploring the topic in greater depth. The content covers a broad range of areas, including strategy, tactics, openings, endgames, and checkmates, aiming to serve different levels from beginners to competitive players. The page also mentions a learning program called “64 corrected exercises to master the 64 squares,” and indicates that specialized programs on openings, checkmates, endgames, strategy, tactics, and more may be launched in the future.
A key strength of Chesstips is its instructor credibility. The page lists Tatiana Dornbusch (Woman International Grandmaster), Philippe Dornbusch (FIDE player and coach/instructor), and Nino Maisuradze (Woman International Grandmaster and two-time French champion). For a free email-based product, this level of playing strength and teaching background gives it a reasonable degree of credibility.
The current page clearly states that subscription is free, but it does not disclose any pricing for paid courses, payment methods, refund policies, or membership plans. It also does not specify whether interactive Q&A, homework feedback, learning records, or community features are provided, so it feels more like a lightweight content subscription than a full online course platform.
The advantages are that it is free, lightweight, easy to stick with, and covers multiple key areas of chess; the daily email format lowers the barrier to getting started. The drawbacks are that the course structure, sample content, and learning path are not presented in much detail, and the specialized courses still appear to be in the planning stage. In addition, the content is in French, which creates a language barrier for Chinese or English learners.
It is better suited to French-speaking beginners, casual players, and improving players who want to keep their chess instincts sharp through short daily practice. If you need structured video courses, coach feedback, or Chinese-language instruction, you may need to choose another platform. Access from mainland China cannot be determined from the page text alone, so it is currently listed as unknown.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on chesstips.fr official site.
chesstips.fr is an France Education provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach chesstips.fr directly.