P.E.’s Reviews > La méthode du pivert > Status Update
P.E.
is on page 96 of 394
Alexandre Alekhine: « Quand on m'a demandé 'Comment se fait-il que vous choisissiez de meilleurs coups que vos adversaires ?', j'ai répondu 'Je suis ravi que vous me posiez cette question, car il se trouve que la réponse est très simple. Je trouve mes propres coups et je fais trouver les siens par mon adversaire. »
— Apr 10, 2026 03:35AM
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P.E.’s Previous Updates
P.E.
is on page 121 of 394
"Les échecs ne s'enseignent pas. Ils s'apprennent." – Mikhaïl Botvinnik
[Vous avez dit étonnant ?]
— Jun 18, 2026 01:45PM
[Vous avez dit étonnant ?]
P.E.
is on page 108 of 394
[Still on the intermediate-level puzzles, with a lot of positions taken from Alekhine's games.]
— May 11, 2026 03:12PM
P.E.
is on page 104 of 394
[It is said practice makes perfect, and consistency is key!]
— Apr 29, 2026 02:59PM
P.E.
is on page 92 of 394
[In find that keeping up the pace of 3 Woodpecker chess puzzles a day that I set for myself truly helps]
— Mar 29, 2026 11:04AM
P.E.
is on page 84 of 394
A fun endgame puzzle: Black to move and win.
Move 39... from: Lasker - Loman, USA (sim.) 1903
https://www.chess.com/0ec1be8e-8939-4...
— Mar 15, 2026 02:48AM
Move 39... from: Lasker - Loman, USA (sim.) 1903
https://www.chess.com/0ec1be8e-8939-4...
P.E.
is on page 76 of 394
An eye-pleasing problem from W. Steinitz – S. Winawer, Paris (1867). If you want to try it yourself, take the game below, and stop after the 16th move from Black. White to move!
https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chess...
— Feb 27, 2026 05:28AM
https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chess...

