White's future plans will depend upon Black's choice of set-up. Black has a particularly wide range of possibilities in the early stages as White's London structure exerts little influence on Black's side of the board. Black may therefore develop freely. Common options include: • '''Queen's Gambit Declined-type defence''': d5, e6, Nf6, c5, Nc6 (or d7), Bd6 (or e7), 0-0. Black stakes out some space on the . The position will likely resemble a
Slav Defence with . White will typically post his king's knight on e5 and aim for a attack. • '''Queen's Indian-type defence''': Nf6, b6, Bb7, e6, d6, Be7, Nbd7. Black adopts a flexible
hypermodern defence, preventing a knight incursion on e5, and then waits to see how White will proceed before deciding on the placement of the central pawns and on which side to
castle. • '''King's Indian-type defence''': Nf6, g6, Bg7, d6, 0-0. Black will typically aim for either ...e5 (after suitable preparation with Nbd7 and Re8) or ...c5 (in which case the game will resemble a
Réti Opening with colours reversed). White may prefer to post the king's bishop on e2 rather than d3 in this line, as Black's
fianchetto structure means that a bishop on d3 would have limited scope. •
Symmetrical defence: d5, Bf5, Nf6, e6. Black mirrors White's development. White's strongest response is considered to be transposing to
Queen's Gambit, where there is a sharp line continuing with 4.e3 e6 5.c4 Bxb1 6.Qxb1 Bb4+ 7.Kd1, with White winning the bishop pair at the cost of castling rights. Without transposing, the line tends to be very drawish. • Other options for Black include playing the
Hippopotamus Defence (g6, Bg7, b6, Bb7, d6, e6, Ne7, Nd7), in which case White will probably have little option but to play e3–e4, losing a tempo, and a knight on d2 may not be optimally placed. Additional options for Black include Slav-type structures (d5/c6), Grünfeld-type structures (Nf6/g6/Bg7/d5), reversed Torre Attack (d5/Nf6/Bg4), and Chigorin-type play (d5/Nc6/Bg4). A popular response to the London System at higher levels of play is an early ...c5, allowing ...Qb6 (aiming at White's weak b2-pawn, which is no longer defended by a bishop on c1). This seeks to disrupt White's comfortable development system. The line 1.d4 Nf6 2.Bf4 c5 3.e3 Qb6 was considered by Johnsen and Kovačević to be the most critical line. ==Jobava London==