Profile: 11ashish - The Chessboard Biologist
Meet 11ashish, a strategist who approaches chess much like a surgeon butterfly flutters—carefully, but with an unexpectedly fierce sting. Over the years, 11ashish has metamorphosed from a rookie Rapid player hovering around a modest 634 rating in 2020 to a seasoned contender maintaining steady Rapid ratings in the mid-700s by 2025. Though their rating stats might seem like the slow crawl of evolution, their win-rate evolution tells a different tale—highlighting a player patient enough to hatch big ideas but quick to seize prey in tactical skirmishes.
Playing Style & Strengths
Like any clever organism adapting to its environment, 11ashish’s style reveals a notable fondness for the Queen's Pawn Opening and the Queen's Gambit Declined Chigorin Defense, boasting win rates well over 56% and 65% respectively. Tactics are their petri dish—showing a whopping 100% win rate after losing a piece, which suggests a strong ability to recover and ‘regrow’ advantages in adversity. This comeback rate of 66.56% makes 11ashish a resilient species on the chessboard, thriving where others might fold.
An intriguing biological pun: their 'Early Resignation Rate' is about 10.67%, indicating they don’t easily cull their games prematurely—in other words, 11ashish prefers to see the full lifecycle of the battle, especially with an endgame frequency just shy of 50%. Their average moves per win crown each victory a well-nourished feast, averaging nearly 59 moves.
Competitive Environment
Rapid is their primary ecosystem—with over 300 wins but close to 325 losses and 38 draws—demonstrating a classic survival-of-the-fittest scenario. In Daily chess, their few matches are almost undefeated, while Blitz and Bullet remain an unpredictable, fast-paced habitat where 11ashish experiments with varied success. Notably, their longest winning streak is a hardy 10 games—a testament to their ability to flourish in fertile conditions.
Behavioral Notes
Their psychological tilt factor clocks in at a mild 12%, so while frustrations can occasionally make the chess flora wilt, it seldom spoils the whole garden. The win rates vary by day and hour, with prime time in early morning hours and Saturday showing best success—a true crepuscular predator of the 64 squares.
In Conclusion
Like a resilient species in the vast forest of chess players, 11ashish thrives on patience, adaptation, and surprising comebacks. Whether it's harvesting victory through the Queen's Pawn gambit or clawing back from a lost piece, this player reminds us all that in the biological and chess worlds alike, it isn’t always the biggest that wins, but the most adaptable. Keep an eye on this evolving contender—they might just spring a queen-size surprise.