When your opponent pushes 1.e4, you can answer politely with 1…e5 and settle into a symmetrical position. Or you can play 1…c5, the Sicilian, and tell them right away that you’re not looking for a draw. It’s the most played defense in the world, the choice of the great champions, and the one that wins the most games with Black. It asks a little more work than the others, but it pays back what you put into it.

Let’s see why it works, and where to start without drowning.

The first move: 1.e4 c5

The Sicilian begins with 1.e4 c5. At first glance, nothing spectacular: a flank pawn stepping forward two squares. But that c5 pawn does one precise thing. It controls the d4 square and denies White the beautiful 1.e4 + d4 pawn center they get after 1…e5.

After 1...c5, the black pawn controls d4 and denies White their big pawn center.

If White still wants to play d4 (and they almost always do), the usual continuation is 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4. Look at what just happened: White has traded their d-pawn for your c-pawn. You end up with an open c-file for your rooks and a pawn majority in the center. They keep a bit more space and a tempo in development. That’s the Sicilian bargain: an unbalanced position where each side attacks on its own wing.

After 4.Nxd4, the c-file is open for your rooks and the center is unbalanced.

Black’s idea

The plan for Black fits in one sentence: attack on the queenside while White hunts for mate on the kingside.

That half-open c-file is your highway. You park a rook on it, push your a- and b-pawns, and you start clawing at the enemy king when it castles long. It’s a race. Often, whoever gets there first wins, and that’s what makes these games so alive.

In exchange, you have to accept living a little dangerously. Your king isn’t always safe, and a single slip can cost you dearly. That’s the price of ambition.

The main variations

The Sicilian isn’t one opening but an entire family. Here are the branches worth knowing.

  • The Najdorf: 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 a6. That little a6 move prepares everything: it stops a white knight or bishop from landing on b5, and it sets up the …b5 expansion. It’s the most studied variation in all of chess history, the one Fischer and Kasparov played. Rich, but heavy on theory.
  • The Dragon: after 4…Nf6 5.Nc3, Black plays 5…g6 and fianchettoes the bishop on g7. That bishop sweeps the long diagonal all the way to a1. The positions are sharp, often with opposite-side castling, and things can heat up in a hurry.
  • The Sicilian Kan: 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 e6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 a6. Flexible, low on theory, hard to attack head-on. A good place to start.
  • The Accelerated Dragon: 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 g6. Like the Dragon, but you keep your d-pawn on d7 so you can play …d5 in one go later. Watch out for the Maroczy Bind with 5.c4, which grabs space from you.

Know too that many opponents dodge the main theory with the Anti-Sicilians: the Alapin (2.c3), the Rossolimo (2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5), or the Closed Sicilian (2.Nc3). These are calm systems you need to know, because you’ll face them more often than the Najdorf at your level.

Where to start without getting discouraged

Here’s the classic mistake: a beginner reads that the Najdorf is the best, downloads forty moves of theory, and gets beaten on move twelve because they forgot the continuation. The Sicilian punishes memory without understanding.

Start simpler. The Kan or the Accelerated Dragon ask for fewer exact lines and rest mostly on clear plans: develop, castle, put your rook on the c-file, push on the queenside. You’ll play real games of chess instead of reciting, and you’ll learn to feel Sicilian positions from the inside.

That’s exactly what Prologue does: instead of skimming a list of moves, you replay your variation yourself, guided at first and then from memory, until the first moves come out without thinking. And because every move is explained, you learn why …a6 comes before …b5, and what it’s actually for. Then when your opponent goes off-book, you’re not stranded: the plan carries you.

If the Sicilian still feels too much for you, take a look at the quieter options in our guide to Black’s defenses, or at the Caro-Kann Defense, which is more solid and easier to pick up.

Frequently asked questions

Is the Sicilian too hard for a beginner?

No, as long as you choose it well. The Najdorf and the Dragon are demanding, but the Kan and the Accelerated Dragon rest on simple plans and forgive more. You can absolutely start with them and move on to the sharper lines later.

Why does the Sicilian win so many games?

Because it unbalances the position from the very first move. Instead of a symmetrical battle where a draw comes easily, both sides attack on different wings. That creates positions where Black really plays to win, not just to survive.

What if White dodges the theory with 2.c3 or 3.Bb5?

Those are the Anti-Sicilians, and you’ll see them often. They’re less dangerous but call for their own plans. Against the Alapin (2.c3), 2…d5 or 2…Nf6 equalize nicely; against the Rossolimo (3.Bb5), you can play 3…g6 calmly. It’s best to prepare them separately.

Do you need to know a lot of moves by heart?

It depends on the variation. In sharp lines like the Najdorf, theory really matters. In flexible systems like the Kan, five or six well-understood moves are enough to come out of the opening with a healthy position.