Library/Openings/Ruy Lopez/Berlin Defense/Rio de Janeiro Variation ECO C67
Opening· 10 plies

Ruy Lopez: Berlin Defense, Rio de Janeiro Variation

An entry in the Encyclopedia of Chess Openings (ECO C67), reached after 10 half-moves: 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 Nf6 4. O-O Nxe4 5. d4 Be7.

Ruy Lopez: Berlin Defense, Rio de Janeiro Variation ECO C67
87654321
abcdefgh
Black rook
Black bishop
Black queen
Black king
Black rook
Black pawn
Black pawn
Black pawn
Black pawn
Black bishop
Black pawn
Black pawn
Black pawn
Black knight
White bishop
Black pawn
White pawn
Black knight
White knight
White pawn
White pawn
White pawn
White pawn
White pawn
White pawn
White rook
White knight
White bishop
White queen
White rook
White king
10/10
  1. 1.
  2. 2.
  3. 3.
  4. 4.
  5. 5.
Use ← → arrows or click moves to step through.

End of this line

No further variations branch from this position in our database. To explore neighbouring ideas:

About this opening

Ruy Lopez: Berlin Defense, Rio de Janeiro Variation is an opening in the Encyclopedia of Chess Openings, classified under code C67. ECO group C (C00–C99) covers open games (1.e4 e5) and the French Defence, including the Ruy Lopez, Italian, Scotch and King's Gambit. This particular variation is reached after 10 half-moves from the starting position, with the move sequence 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 Nf6 4. O-O Nxe4 5. d4 Be7.

It belongs to the Ruy Lopez family. Within that family this is a level-2 branch (the Berlin Defense → Rio de Janeiro Variation line). The immediate parent line is Ruy Lopez: Berlin Defense, transitioned via 5…Be7.

The opening sequence in prose form: 1.e4 e5, 2.Nf3 Nc6, 3.Bb5 Nf6, 4.O-O Nxe4, 5.d4 Be7. From this position the encyclopaedia records no further canonical continuations — practical play branches into unnamed transpositions or returns to the parent line for alternative ideas.

Use the interactive board above to walk through the moves position-by-position. Click any move in the navigation to step backwards, or use the keyboard arrow keys. For statistical data — how often master-level players have reached this position, White's win-rate, draw frequency, Black's score — see the panel in the right column.

Caissly's coverage of C67 extends through every named sub-variation in this line and across all four locales (English, Spanish, Portuguese, Russian). Where editorial commentary exists for a specific variation it appears as the page body; otherwise the page presents the structural data, board, and statistics as shown here.