Your opening repertoire inside Reperto
In Reperto, the focus is that all your opening files live in one place, with the order you need to know where all your chess content is.
The idea is that your repertoire is not a collection of loose PGNs, but an organized space where you can save, study, and train the openings you are going to play.
Your opening files in one place
When you study openings, the problem is not only learning moves. You also need to know where each file is, what it contains, and how it relates to the rest. If your material is spread across loose files, videos, screenshots, and PGNs that are not connected to each other, it is very easy to lose the thread.
That is why, in Reperto, our opening repository works as the place where all your content lives. Your files remain inside the same structure, with the order needed to return to them when you want to study an opening, review a variation, or expand a line you were already preparing.
A space prepared to build your repertoire
That order is what turns information storage into a real repertoire. It is not simply about saving content, but about creating a coherent space where your openings make sense together and where you know what you are preparing with White, with Black, and against your opponent’s main replies.
If you do not have a repertoire yet, you can start from day 0
For players who still do not have their own repertoire, Reperto also includes a complete repertoire created by a Grandmaster, valid as a practical base for online players up to approximately 2200 ELO.
This lets you start without having to build everything from scratch. From the first day, you can study openings with quality content that you can play in your games.
Also, that included repertoire does not remain as closed material. You can import it as an opening, study it inside Reperto, and go deeper into the lines that interest you most.