Van Geet Opening: Grünfeld Defense, Steiner Gambit

White Gambit

Source Lichess

Playable-1%
All Ratings
Minimum Advantage-1.4%

White loses more often than wins at this level

Rating TrendPeak: +0.0% at 1600-1799
Win%47.9%
Games42K
Breakpoint (Overall)0-999
4.Nxe4
Van Geet Opening: Grünfeld Defense, Steiner GambitWhite Gambit
Rating
Time Control

Does Van Geet Opening: Grünfeld Defense, Steiner Gambit work for White at All Ratings?

Snapshot

At All Ratings, Van Geet Opening: Grünfeld Defense, Steiner Gambit gives White a -1.4% minimum advantage (90% confidence). This gambit underperforms at this level.

RatingMin AdvWhite WinDrawWhite LossGames
0-999-9.7%45.8%4.5%49.6%781
1000-1199-4.7%48.7%2.3%49.0%1.4K
1200-1399-4.4%48.0%2.9%49.1%2.4K
1400-1599-3.2%48.2%2.9%49.0%4.7K
1600-1799+0.0%49.1%3.4%47.4%9.6K
1800-1999-2.7%47.4%3.9%48.7%13K
2000-2199-4.3%46.6%4.3%49.1%7.5K
2200-2499-3.2%47.7%4.8%47.5%2.4K
2500+-1.8%53.8%2.4%43.8%187
Full Opening StatsSee rating/time-control breakdowns for White on the opening stats page
Analyze Van Geet Opening: Grünfeld Defense, Steiner Gambit PositionsGet move-by-move win rates with the TrueElo analyzer

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Van Geet Opening: Grünfeld Defense, Steiner Gambit sound?

The Van Geet Opening: Grünfeld Defense, Steiner Gambit breaks at 0-999 overall (all time controls)—the first rating bracket where White no longer statistically wins more than loses. Below this rating, the gambit is viable for White. Note: breakpoints vary by time control—use the filters above for specific data.

What is the Van Geet Opening: Grünfeld Defense, Steiner Gambit win rate?

The Van Geet Opening: Grünfeld Defense, Steiner Gambit has a 47.9% (90% CI: 47.5%-48.3%) win rate for White overall, with a 3.7% draw rate and 48.5% loss rate. This is based on 42K games from Lichess.

What is the best rating to play the Van Geet Opening: Grünfeld Defense, Steiner Gambit?

The Van Geet Opening: Grünfeld Defense, Steiner Gambit performs best at 1600-1799, where White has a minimum advantage of +0.0%. This means we're 90% confident White wins at least 0.0 percentage points more than they lose at this rating.

Is the Van Geet Opening: Grünfeld Defense, Steiner Gambit better in blitz or rapid?

Blitz (+-0.6% edge) outperforms Classical (+-5.0% edge) by 4.4 percentage points. Faster time controls typically favor gambits because opponents have less time to find accurate defenses.

Does the Van Geet Opening: Grünfeld Defense, Steiner Gambit breakpoint vary by time control?

Yes, significantly. Breakpoints by time control: Bullet: 0-999, Blitz: 0-999, Rapid: 0-999, Classical: 1600-1799. "Never" means the gambit remains viable through all rating brackets in that time control. Faster time controls typically extend viability.

How sharp is the Van Geet Opening: Grünfeld Defense, Steiner Gambit?

The Van Geet Opening: Grünfeld Defense, Steiner Gambit is extremely sharp with only 3.7% draws—96.3% of games end decisively. This makes it an excellent choice when you need to play for a win rather than accept a draw.

Should I play the Van Geet Opening: Grünfeld Defense, Steiner Gambit?

If you're below 0-999 overall, the Van Geet Opening: Grünfeld Defense, Steiner Gambit is statistically favorable for White. Above that rating, opponents defend better and the gambit's edge disappears. Consider your typical opponents' level and the time control—faster games extend the gambit's viability.

How do I defend against the Van Geet Opening: Grünfeld Defense, Steiner Gambit?

As Black, the Van Geet Opening: Grünfeld Defense, Steiner Gambit becomes easier to defend at 0-999 and above. Key principles: accept the material but develop quickly, castle early, trade pieces to reduce attacking potential, and return material at the right moment to neutralize the initiative. In faster time controls, the gambit is harder to defend—consider declining or transposing if you're not prepared.

How reliable is the Van Geet Opening: Grünfeld Defense, Steiner Gambit data?

This analysis is based on 42K games from Lichess. All statistics include 90% confidence intervals. Generally, 300+ games provide statistically meaningful results. Rating-specific and time-control-specific breakdowns have their own sample sizes shown in the table above.