Avatar of 2random471

2random471

Playing Since: 2019-11-16 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Daily: 1764
29W / 18L / 0D
Rapid: 2005
11W / 2L / 1D
Blitz: 2512
3183W / 3172L / 464D
Bullet: 2357
1144W / 1034L / 139D

Player Profile: 2random471

Long before chess became a battleground for grandmasters, 2random471 quietly embarked on their journey into the labyrinth of 64 squares and 32 opposable pieces. With a flair for the unpredictable and a name that nods to the chaotic beauty of randomness, this player has steadily climbed the ranks, proving that destiny favors the bold (and occasionally the random).

Rating and Style

As of 2025, 2random471 boasts impressive peak ratings across various formats:

  • Blitz: 2487
  • Bullet: 2457
  • Rapid: 2070
  • Daily Chess: 1800 (peak in early 2020)

Known for an enduring stamina in longer games and fierce tactical awareness, 2random471 has an astonishing comeback rate of nearly 87% and a knack for turning losses after losing pieces into victories almost half the time. They average about 70-73 moves per win or loss, indicating their determination to outwit opponents in the deep trenches of the endgame.

Opening Moves: The Unpredictable Arsenal

One might expect a player named "2random471" to be erratic, but this chess enthusiast prefers a strategic yet diverse selection of openings:

  • Indian Game: The go-to favorite in Blitz, with a win rate just over 51% across hundreds of games.
  • Sicilian Defense Cowboy Attack: A spicy weapon in Blitz and Bullet, securing over 50% wins.
  • Undefined openings surprisingly yield the highest Blitz win rate near 62% — perhaps the “random” side shining through.
  • Regular visits to the Caro Kann Defense and its many variations, proving a fondness for solid yet flexible structures.

The Games and The Glory

2random471 recently clinched a notable victory using the London System against a tough opponent, "Immortal_Jellyfishes," winning by resignation after a 24-move battle filled with positional finesse and timely attacks.

Not all battles end in triumph, though. A recent loss came at the hands of “Robin_Lec” in a high-level duel featuring the Queen’s Gambit Accepted. Such challenges only fuel 2random471's determination to improve.

Playing Habits & Quirks

Interestingly, 2random471's best time to play is around 10 AM, perfectly primed to crank up concentration and tactical vision. The player is a careful warrior—resigning only about 2.35% of games early and digging deep into endgame play almost three-quarters of the time.

When the going gets tough, 2random471 shows impressive resilience, fighting back from tough spots to keep opponents on their toes. Despite a slightly higher tendency to lose against higher-rated foes, this player consistently triumphs against equal or lower-rated opponents, highlighting a sharp competitive edge.

Summary

2random471 may sound like a randomly generated username, but make no mistake: this is a focused and strategic tactical mind with an uncanny ability to adapt and fight until the very last move. Whether darting through blitz or pacing the long daily games, 2random471 brings passion, grit, and just an appropriate splash of delightful randomness to every match.

One can only wonder: What’s next for this enigmatic chess warrior? Probably another unexpected attack or a creative gambit—because in 2random471’s world, the unexpected is always the first move.


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick overview

Nice set of blitz games — you're getting complicated positions, creating tactical chances, and your opening repertoire (especially the Caro‑Kann lines) is producing active pieces. Small, repeatable mistakes and occasional misjudged simplifications are costing you more than raw tactics. Below I highlight what you did well, what to tidy up, and a short concrete plan you can use in the next few sessions.

Win vs ahmed576433 — what to keep doing

Positionally and tactically this game shows several positives:

  • You got pieces to active squares quickly and kept pressure on the enemy king — good use of the queen and knight coordination to generate threats and force concessions.
  • When the opponent traded into complications you found forcing continuations (queen + knight checks) instead of drifting — that punished sloppy defense.
  • You converted the initiative without panicking in the time control: steady, threat‑based moves rather than random checks.

Replay the critical phase (roughly moves 15–23) — here's a board to step through the flow:

Loss vs byrn_enjoyer — main issues

This was a sharp queenside game that turned into a pawn race. Key takeaways:

  • You allowed a passed a‑pawn to advance (a7) while simplifying — once the opponent's outside passer is close to promotion, exchanging into simplified positions can be fatal. Learn to judge pawn races before liquidating.
  • There were multiple exchanges on the kingside/center that left you with little counterplay while the opponent’s pawn advanced. When down a tempo against a running pawn, look for ways to create counterplay (checks, piece activity, or blocking the pawn).
  • Watch for knight forks and outposts in these pawn‑race positions — the opponent used his knight well to both block and support the pawn run.

Openingly this came from an English setup where you allowed an early queenside grab — study the typical breakpoints (when to accept a queenside imbalance and when to keep pieces on board).

Recurring patterns I see

  • Strength: Excellent piece activation and finding tactical shots in the middlegame — you spot checks and forks quickly.
  • Weakness: Simplifying into pawn races or endgames where the opponent has an outside passed pawn. You tend to exchange pieces in positions that favor the opponent’s passer.
  • Time & conversion: You're strong in chaos but sometimes fail to convert or misjudge when to exchange — typical blitz trade‑offs. Your recent month shows a moderate dip (-50) but your longer trends are positive.

Concrete improvements — checklist for your next 10 blitz games

  • Before any trade ask: "Does this create/pass a passed pawn race?" If yes, delay exchanges and keep pieces that can blockade or harass the pawn.
  • Count the race: compare king distance & promotion squares — if opponent’s pawn is faster, prioritize creating counterplay over simplifying.
  • When your knight is better than a bishop in closed positions, keep it — knights stop outside passers more reliably in many structures.
  • Keep a short tactical warmup: 8–12 puzzles before a session (focus: forks, skewers, knight tactics). That improves recognition in blitz.
  • One‑minute review after each loss: note the one moment where the game tilted (missed tactic / bad simplification / underestimated pawn). Make that your “one lesson” per game.

Mini training plan (weekly)

  • Daily (15–25 minutes): tactics — emphasize knight forks and clearance/deflection combos.
  • 3× weekly (20 minutes): endgame drills — rook vs pawn, basic pawn races, Lucena/Philidor patterns. Practice converting an extra pawn and defending an outside passer.
  • 2× weekly (30–45 minutes): slow training games (10+5) where you focus on trade decisions and counting pawn races — review with engine only for blunders and missed winning plans.
  • Openings (2× week, 15 minutes): tidy Caro‑Kann Exchange lines you play — install 3–4 model plans for both sides (avoid one‑move traps; learn main breakpoints).

Practical tips for blitz games right now

  • If an outside passed pawn appears on the board, stop and count the race — trading into a simplified endgame is only good if your king/pieces can stop promotion.
  • When you have initiative, convert by restricting the opponent (blockade squares, reduce mobility) rather than by immediate material grabs that free counterplay.
  • In the Caro‑Kann Exchange (your most-played), learn a handful of typical minor‑piece plans and one pawn break you will play — consistency reduces time spent thinking.
  • Use pre‑session puzzle warmups to sharpen recognition of knight forks and back rank patterns — they show up a lot in your blitz pool.

Useful terms to review: Caro-Kann Defense: Exchange Variation, Passed pawn, Back rank mate.

Next steps — 30 minute action you can start now

  • Open your winning game vs ahmed576433 in the viewer above and replay moves 15–23 slowly. Ask: why were the opponent’s pieces passive? Where could they have created counterplay?
  • Open the loss vs byrn_enjoyer and identify the exact exchange where the passed pawn became unstoppable. Mark that move and think what alternative you had.
  • Do a 10‑minute tactical drill (knight forks) and a 10‑minute endgame drill (stop outside passers). Then play two 3+2 blitz games implementing the checklist above.

Keep it short — final encouragement

Your long‑term stats and strength‑adjusted win rate show you belong at a strong level — these are small, fixable leaks. Tighten trade decisions around outside passers, keep sharpening knight tactics, and your blitz conversion will improve quickly.

When you want, drop another batch of 5 blitz PGNs and I’ll give a focused follow‑up: one recurring mistake to eliminate, and one pattern to exploit.



🆚 Opponent Insights

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Most Played Opponents
Daniel Girsh 89W / 105L / 24D View Games
Akira Nakada 63W / 120L / 13D View Games
mlgprobanter 40W / 47L / 8D View Games
Pedro Espinosa 44W / 26L / 2D View Games
Iscore 49W / 14L / 3D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 2477 2410 2005 1764
2024 2390 2363 2005 1742
2023 2338 2421 2005
2022 2238 2298 2005
2021 2292 2296 1988 1526
2020 2351 2275 1988 1425
2019 1923 2088
Rating by Year201920202021202220232024202524771425YearRatingBulletBlitzRapidDaily

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 348W / 273L / 39D 292W / 316L / 46D 76.3
2024 458W / 384L / 41D 424W / 408L / 56D 75.9
2023 452W / 405L / 59D 418W / 420L / 69D 76.0
2022 223W / 207L / 25D 199W / 211L / 38D 75.0
2021 187W / 175L / 29D 170W / 204L / 19D 74.4
2020 519W / 532L / 72D 516W / 513L / 83D 71.5
2019 44W / 32L / 4D 41W / 32L / 9D 72.5

Openings: Most Played

Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Caro-Kann Defense 225 117 97 11 52.0%
Amar Gambit 201 103 89 9 51.2%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 135 61 68 6 45.2%
Modern 106 52 47 7 49.1%
Sicilian Defense 106 56 41 9 52.8%
Hungarian Opening: Wiedenhagen-Beta Gambit 71 40 29 2 56.3%
Scandinavian Defense 70 36 30 4 51.4%
Barnes Defense 64 30 32 2 46.9%
Caro-Kann Defense: Exchange Variation 58 30 25 3 51.7%
Czech Defense 55 30 24 1 54.5%
Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Caro-Kann Defense 691 304 334 53 44.0%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 404 209 171 24 51.7%
Sicilian Defense 300 145 140 15 48.3%
Modern 256 129 112 15 50.4%
Amazon Attack 239 109 114 16 45.6%
Sicilian Defense: Closed 197 92 91 14 46.7%
Australian Defense 195 94 83 18 48.2%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 148 67 70 11 45.3%
French Defense: Advance Variation 146 73 70 3 50.0%
Caro-Kann Defense: Exchange Variation 140 66 68 6 47.1%
Rapid Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 4 3 1 0 75.0%
Amazon Attack 4 4 0 0 100.0%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 3 3 0 0 100.0%
Caro-Kann Defense: Exchange Variation 3 3 0 0 100.0%
Amar Gambit 2 1 1 0 50.0%
Caro-Kann Defense 2 2 0 0 100.0%
QGD Tarrasch: 4.cxd5 1 0 1 0 0.0%
Italian Game: Classical Variation, Ghulam-Kassim Variation 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Réti Opening 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Dresden Opening: The Goblin 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Daily Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Unknown 15 4 11 0 26.7%
Sicilian Defense 5 5 0 0 100.0%
Caro-Kann Defense 4 4 0 0 100.0%
Amazon Attack 2 1 1 0 50.0%
Sicilian Defense: Closed, Anti-Sveshnikov Variation, Kharlov-Kramnik Line 2 2 0 0 100.0%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 2 1 1 0 50.0%
French Defense 2 0 2 0 0.0%
Barnes Defense 2 0 2 0 0.0%
QGD: 2...Bf5 3.cxd5 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Bird Opening: Dutch Variation, Batavo Gambit 1 1 0 0 100.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 15 0
Losing 12 1
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