The Pirc Defense is a hypermodern opening for Black against 1. e4 that begins 1. e4 d6 and follows with 2...Nf6, 3...g6 and ...Bg7. Instead of contesting the center with pawns, Black invites White to build a broad pawn center and then attacks it with pieces and the timely ...c5 and ...e5 breaks. It reaches the same fianchetto setup against almost everything White tries, so it needs far less memorization than the Sicilian while still fighting for the full point. Below 1600 it is a genuine counterattacking weapon: White commits to a plan early, and Black has a ready answer to each one.
The main tabiya arrives after 1. e4 d6 2. d4 Nf6 3. Nc3 g6, when Black is about to fianchetto with ...Bg7 and castle. From there White picks a system, and the split at club level is lopsided: more than a third develop quietly with 4. Nf3 (the Classical), nearly one in five reach for 4. Bg5, and the sharpest tries are the Austrian Attack 4. f4 and the 150 Attack with Be3, Qd2 and Bh6. About one in ten opponents skips all of that and lunges 3. e5 or 4. e5. This trainer gives one coherent plan against each: the ...Nc6 and ...e5 break against quiet development, a queenside race against the attacking setups, and a queen trade that wins the pawn back against the push.
Strengths
Drawbacks
Classical System with ...Nc6 and ...e5
1. e4 d6 2. d4 Nf6 3. Nc3 g6 4. Nf3 Bg7 5. Bd3 O-O 6. O-O Nc6
More than a third of opponents develop quietly with Nf3 and a bishop to d3 or e2, the most common Pirc at club level. Black completes the fianchetto, plays ...Nc6, and jabs ...Ng4 to trade off White’s dark-squared bishop before breaking with ...e5. If White pushes d5, the knight leaps into d4 and Black is already comfortable.
Austrian Attack with ...c5
1. e4 d6 2. d4 Nf6 3. Nc3 g6 4. f4 Bg7 5. Nf3 O-O
The Austrian, 4. f4, is White’s most aggressive try, grabbing the whole center to storm the kingside. Rather than defend passively, Black strikes the base of the center with ...c5 at once, opens lines before White is coordinated, and counterattacks. When White castles long, Black races with ...Qa5 and ...b5 and often gets there first.
The 150 Attack and the queenside race
1. e4 d6 2. d4 Nf6 3. Nc3 g6 4. Be3 Bg7 5. Qd2 c6
The club crusher: White sets up Be3, Qd2 and f3, plays Bh6 to swap Black’s fianchetto bishop, then throws the h-pawn forward. Black meets it head on with ...c6 and ...b5, opening the queenside where White’s king is headed. ...b5-b4 hits the c3-knight and the race is on, usually in Black’s favor once the h-pawn is answered calmly.
Punishing the early e5 push
1. e4 d6 2. d4 Nf6 3. e5 dxe5 4. dxe5 Qxd1+ 5. Kxd1 Ng4
About one in ten opponents lunges e5 to kick the knight, and it backfires. Black trades queens, which costs White the right to castle, then rounds up the e5-pawn with ...Ng4 or ...Nfd7. Black scores well over half of these games from a healthy structure, so a scary-looking push becomes a free improvement.
The Bc4 fork trick
1. e4 d6 2. d4 Nf6 3. Nc3 g6 4. f4 Bg7 5. Nf3 O-O 6. Bc4 Nxe4 7. Nxe4 d5
Whenever White develops the bishop to c4 while the knight sits on c3, Black has a concrete free win: ...Nxe4 removes the defender and ...d5 forks the bishop and the knight, regaining the piece with a strong center. The course drills this fork in three different move orders so you never miss it.
Facing the Pirc with White, the first rule is do not rush e5: the early push scores worst of all, handing Black a queen trade and a better structure. The setups that actually pressure Black are the ambitious ones. The Austrian Attack, 4. f4, takes the maximum center and aims for a direct kingside storm, and the 150 Attack, Be3 with Qd2, Bh6 and f3, trades off the fianchetto bishop and races the h-pawn up the board. Both score best for White at club level. Whatever you pick, keep the initiative and finish development quickly, because a Pirc left alone equalizes with the ...c5 and ...e5 breaks and then counterattacks the center you built.
For White
Choose a system at move 4 and commit. In the Austrian, take the center with f4 and Nf3, castle, and push e5 or storm the kingside before Black’s counterplay lands. In the 150 Attack, play Be3, Qd2 and f3, trade the g7-bishop with Bh6, castle long and roll the h-pawn. Speed is everything: give Black time to complete ...Bg7, ...O-O and the ...c5 or ...e5 break undisturbed and the center you built becomes a target.
For Black
Complete the standard setup, ...d6, ...Nf6, ...g6, ...Bg7 and ...O-O, then attack the center White committed to. Break with ...e5 (trading the dark-squared bishop first with ...Ng4) against quiet development, hit the base with ...c5 against the Austrian, and race with ...c6 and ...b5 against the 150 Attack. Take the free wins when they appear: ...Nxe4 and ...d5 against a c4-bishop, and the queen-trade endgame against a premature e5.
The defense is named after Vasja Pirc, the Slovenian grandmaster who developed and championed the ...d6 and ...g6 systems in the mid-twentieth century, when hypermodern ideas of surrendering the center to attack it later were still being proven sound. It is closely related to the Modern Defense, which reaches the same fianchetto by playing ...g6 before ...Nf6, and it carries ECO codes B07 to B09. Long treated as a fighting surprise weapon, it has been used by aggressive counterattackers at every level, including on the world-championship stage, and remains one of the most combative answers to 1. e4 in online play.