About Avishek - The Chess Enthusiast with a Tactical Twist
Meet Avishek, a determined chess player known for both persistence and surprises on the board. With a dramatic flair for comebacks—a mighty 31.5% of games bounce back from losing a piece—Avishek never lets a rough start define the match.
Rating Highlights & Style
- Rapid: Reached a striking peak rating of 609 in 2025, up from 434 just a year prior, proving quick learning and adaptability.
- Blitz: Settled comfortably in the high 300s, with a solid win rate around 50% using secret (and maybe mystical) opening strategies.
- Bullet: An intense battler with thousands of games logged and an almost even split between wins and losses. Avishek is no stranger to fast-paced, adrenaline-fueled duels.
- Daily Chess: A niche playground; though only 9 games in 2024, those careful moves earned a respectable peak rating above 525.
The Winning Streaks & Opponents
Avishek boasts a longest winning streak of 9 games—a commendable burst of brilliance—although the current streak rests at a humble zero. Opponents beware: depending on the day and the hour, Avishek’s win rates swing between steady confidence and a dash of chaos (hello, 35% winrate at 21:00!).
A Psychological Peek
With a tilt factor of 12, Avishek sometimes lets emotions spill onto the board, but stays mostly composed. Average victory games wrap up in about 33 moves, while losses tend to drag on longer—so perhaps patience is an improving skill.
Playing Style: Secret Openings and Calculated Risks
Using a "Top Secret" opening strategy across all time controls, Avishek maintains an intriguing mystique that's both effective and confounding. With a minimal early resignation rate (just 3%), this player is in it for the long haul, often fighting deep into the endgame (occurring about 24% of the time).
Fun Fact
Avishek’s win rate after losing a piece in a game is a staggering 100%. Yes, sometimes it’s not about how you start, but how you sneakily overtake with a grin and a bishop fork.
All in all, Avishek is a mix of resilience, secret strategies, and a quirky ability to turn defeat into victory—living proof that in chess, the game isn't over until the king takes a bow.