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Two relatively strong chess players have told me that the following line is an obvious win for Black:
1 b3 e5 2 Bb2 Nc6 3 e3 d5 4 Bb5 Bd6 5 f4 exf4 6 Bxg7 Qh4+
At first glance, this looks scary for White. But let's look at some likely continuations:
7 Kf1 fxe3 (7...Bg4 8 Bxc3+ bxc3 9 Qe1) 8 Qe2 (or 8 dxe3 Nge7 9 Nf3 and 10 Bxh8) 8...Nge7 9 Nf3 and 10 Bxh8.
Personally, I see little hope for Black. The clincher is that 1 b3 e5 2 Bb2 Nc6 3 e3 d5 4 Bb5 Bd6 5 f4 has been a popular variation among Grandmasters for twenty of more years. So it probably does not have a simple refutation.
An interesting coincidence occurs in the most popular continuation after 5 f4: 5...Qh4+ 6 g3 Qe7 and White has the initiative. The coincidence is that the following obscure line of the King's Gambit is somewhat similar: 1 e4 e5 2 f4 exf4 3 Qf3 (Breyer Gambit) 3...Qh4+ 4 g3 fxg3 5 hxg3 Qf6. In both cases, Black's Queen check is not designed to attack the King so much as to weaken White's kingside pawns. Maybe an attack will result, but probably not.