The move 1...d6 is a "hypers modern" gesture. You are not trying to occupy the center with pawns; you are allowing White to build a beautiful center (pawns on e4 and d4) so you can later shred it to pieces.
Black frequently aims for the ...c6, ...a6, and ...b5 pawn advance to challenge White’s center or launch a flank attack.
like a holy text. In the hushed tension of the City Championship, his opponent, a grandmaster named Volkov, slammed down the King’s Pawn with the confidence of a man who had already won. Elias didn’t blink. He pushed his pawn one square.
Search for "Pirc and KID Repertoire PDF" or "d6 Universal System Chessable" – then download the sample or convert the course notes manually. The perfect PDF is out there.
Months passed. Jonas’s bench at the park collected a motley crew. A violinist who played for spare coins and moved rooks with the same patient grace; an engineer who traced tactical motifs like wiring diagrams; a poet who annotated games with single words—“waiting,” “breath,” “knot.” They traded games and stories, and the PDF’s printed title began to look less like an instruction and more like a manifesto.
The repertoire typically leads to positions that appear passive at first but contain significant "hidden" counterplay: