The King's Indian Attack, also known as the Barcza System, is a chess opening system for White. The opening is not a series of specific moves, but rather a that can be played from many different move orders. Though the KIA is often reached via 1.e4 followed by d3, Nd2, Ngf3, g3, Bg2, and 0-0, it can also arise from 1.g3, 1.Nf3, or even 1.d3.
Characteristics
The KIA is a mirror image of the setup adopted by Black in the King's Indian Defence. Yet, because of White's extra tempo, the nature of the subsequent play is often different from that of a typical King's Indian Defence. By its nature, the KIA is a closed, strategic opening that presents its practitioner with common themes and tactics and a comfortable middlegame against various defences. White's most common plan involves a central pawnpush, e4–e5, leading to a central bind, , and concrete attacking chances on a kingside-castled black king. Black's resources—more space for example—are not to be underestimated. In fact, this asymmetry often leads to violent middlegames and neatly constructed mating nets involving sacrifices.
Piece manoeuvre
The KIA is characterised by a fianchetto and developing its knights to d2 and f3 respectively. White also maintains king safety by castling kingside. White also has a good control of the.
Use
The KIA is often used against the semi-open defences where Black responds asymmetrically to e4, such as in the French Defence, Sicilian Defence, or Caro–Kann Defence. Yet it can also be played against Black's more common defenses, usually through a move order that begins with 1.Nf3 and a later fianchetto of the white-square bishop. For this reason, transpositions to the Réti Opening, Catalan Opening, English opening or even the Nimzo-Larsen Attack are not uncommon. The KIA is considered a solid opening choice for White, although less ambitious than many more popular openings. Though rarely used at the highest levels except to avoid certain pet lines, it is extremely popular at the clublevel, because it is easier to learn than other openings that require memorising specific move orders to avoid bad positions.
Barcza System
King's Indian Attack is 1.Nf3 d5 2.g3. Common Black responses are 2...Nf6, 2...c6, 2...Bg4, 2...c5, and 2...g6. Then White can play 3.Bg2. King's Indian Attack is 1.Nf3 d5 2.g3 c5 3.Bg2. 1.Nf3 d5 2.g3 Bg4 3.Bg2 Nd7 is the Keres Variation.
Transposition from other lines
1.Nf3 Nf6 2.g3 d5 1.Nf3 c5 2.g3 d5
Transposition to other lines
1.Nf3 d5 2.g3 Nf6 3.d4
Famous games
The following games are perhaps the most famous examples of the KIA.