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What Chess Openings are the Strongest?

I am a chess player with around a 1350 elo rating. I am having trouble on what openings I should study to improve my game. I mainly want to study aggressive openings. Can anyone give my some tips?
I'm as bad as you (but I've finally started chess study and am getting better), so take it with a grain of salt, but according to this:
http://www.reddit.com/r/chess/wiki/FAQ

Basically, you shouldn't worry about your openings or even positional play very much. Care more about getting your tactics right and don't play gambits too much and you will get better. Or so the masters say...
Focus on middle and end game first! Studying openings is fun, though. To get you started, some good openings with aggressive opportunities are the Ruy Lopez for white and the Sicilian for black. Also the King's Indian. Personally, I enjoy playing gambits the most, for especially aggressive lines.
We can't really say that some opening are better than others. The point is what kind of position do you want to obtain at the end of your openings. If you are better in close games, you should prefer queen's gambit, if you love crazy open games, you would better e4.
The point is that if your knowledge of the game is not deep enough, you won't know what you like the most. My suggestion is : improve your tactic, your strategy, your endgame AND try differents opening.
The advices "don't learn openings, you need to practice endgames before" are given with a good heart, but isn't it annoying to loose so much games even before any endgames? You won't win a lot of game without a minimum knowledge about openings. So, try many and then you will be able to compare the ones you are better/easier with and to choose them. When you will have progressed, don't forget to check if the opening you had choosen when you where weaker still suit your style.
There are over 150 million threads on this subject. Learn basic opening principles and basic ideas of a bunch of openings, but focus your study on the middle and endgame.
Which openings are the best?

The ones that your opponent doesn't know.
#6 How would we know that?
We don't have the time to go through our opponent's past games to see which openings he doesn't play.
If you're suggesting playing unorthodox openings, I don't think that would really "improve" his game as he asked for.
tisnjh he's making the point that the best opening is the one in which you are more prepared than your opponent. I don't think he's suggesting that means you should study every opponent to see what opening they are most unprepared for. It's just a fact in the game these days that at the top levels, opening preparation can decide games.

But for the majority of us piece pushers, I think it's far more important to learn the systems of the openings rather than the opening lines themselves. Knowing why there are different responses to different moves in the opening is a simple matter of understanding all the opening principles and which ones trump others when they are in conflict. Understanding these ideas will make it easy to grasp why an opening is played the way it is.

Only then, I think, should we start looking into theoretical preparation, because otherwise we will likely respond poorly to an opponent who leaves book.
play the scotch game against everything except 1 ... nf6
-- in that case push e5 and then you have a nice center :D

here are some tips:
*most of the time castle long
*move the white bishop last
*capture back on d4 with the knight, then don't move the knight until you have to
*prevent d5 (you defend it naturally anyways)
*keep the pressure, don't cash out early for a pawn
*dont be afraid of b4, will push your knight to a better spot
*the long term plan is to play f3 then g4-g5 then h5 to bulldoze opponents king with pawns
-- in the mean time let black develop in exchange for an insane kingside attack

e4 ... nf3 ... d4 will almost always transpose into very strong/aggressive lines for white, especially against the sicilian defense
Use the stonewall attack for white. Most aggressive but it blocks the dark square bishop. But it is very flexible. That is, can be used on a number of moves.

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