: Symbols like ! (good move), ? (mistake), or !! (brilliant) are often used to evaluate moves. 3. How to Open and Use PGN Files

These appear in square brackets at the top of the file. The "Seven Tag Roster" includes: [Event "Name of tournament"] [Site "Location"] [Date "YYYY.MM.DD"] [Round "Round number"] [White "Player Name"] [Black "Player Name"] [Result "1-0, 0-1, or 1/2-1/2"] Part B: Movetext (The Game)

stands for Portable Game Notation . It is a plain text file (with a .pgn or .txt extension) that records both the moves of a game and its metadata (players, date, result) in a format that both humans and computers can read. 2. How to Read PGN Structure

This guide covers everything you need to know about , the universal standard for storing and sharing chess games in a text-based format. 1. What is a PGN File?

The moves follow the tags using : Moves : 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 Annotations : Curly brackets { } are used for text comments.

A standard PGN file consists of two main parts: and Movetext . Part A: Tag Pairs (The Metadata)

Because PGNs are just text, you have several ways to view them: