Avatar of Ombeline

Ombeline

Username: Beubeu55

Playing Since: 2020-03-18 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Daily: 1628
749W / 442L / 54D
Rapid: 2211
390W / 225L / 38D
Blitz: 2081
2407W / 1990L / 231D
Bullet: 1995
256W / 169L / 16D

Ombeline — The Streamer and Chess Player

Ombeline, known online as Beubeu55, is a chess streamer who blends sharp tactics, quick thinking, and a generous dose of humor into every broadcast. Her journey from casual games to high-velocity blitz sessions has built a welcoming community where beginners feel empowered to learn and seasoned players stay for the edge-of-seat battles.

Streaming Focus and Playing Style

Preferring Blitz as her main time control, Ombeline thrives in fast-paced positions that reward clever calculation and calm nerves. Her streams are a mix of live commentary, tactical breakdowns, and friendly banter with chat. She often weaves in

Blitz Rating20202021202220232024202521051804YearBlitz Rating
to show growth and Beubeu55 to connect with fans, all while keeping the mood light and inviting.

Fans appreciate how she explains tricky ideas in accessible terms, turning complex lines into memorable takeaways. From early knights and quick sacrifices to solid endgames, Ombeline demonstrates that chess can be both entertaining and educational.

Community and Content

Beyond the board, Ombeline cultivates a friendly, interactive space where viewers contribute ideas, challenges, and encouragement. Her streams celebrate experimentation, celebrate small wins, and gently demystify the strategic depth that makes chess so captivating. The chat is a buzzing hub of dialogue, memes, and constructive analysis that keeps players coming back for more.

  • Blitz battles with rapid-fire tactics
  • Clear, approachable explanations of ideas
  • Inclusive and supportive environment for all skill levels

Notable Moments

  • Blitz peak rating reached around 2206 in early 2025, a milestone reflecting sustained improvement.
  • Rapid performance topping the 2213 mark in late 2025, highlighting versatility across time controls.
  • Long-running streaks and creative openings discussed live, turning viewers into confident analyzers.

Coach's Avatar

Quick recap of the three recent blitz games you shared

Games reviewed: a clean short win as White against kavidaboss (Queen's Indian type structure), and two losses as Black in complicated middlegames against gambit224 and admiralchess. I looked at the opening choices, the middlegame plans, and — importantly for blitz — your clock handling.

  • Win: solid center play and safe king; game opened from the Queen's Indian family (Queen's Indian Defense).
  • Losses: both games swung into messy tactical/rook endings where time became the deciding factor.

What you did well (keep doing this)

  • Good opening fight and pawn breaks: in the win you gained central space quickly (pushing the d-pawn and playing e4) and punished Black's early knight jump instead of getting into passive defense.
  • Safe king decisions: you castled and finished development before launching major actions — that reduces tactical risk in blitz.
  • Piece activity in attack: in the loss vs Gambit224 you showed a strong sense for invading with rooks and generating mating/decisive threats when the opponent weakened the back rank.
  • Tactical awareness: you found forcing continuations (queen checks, rook lifts) that created winning chances — that pattern recognition is a major asset in blitz.

Primary areas to improve (focus these in training)

  • Time management / Flag risk — Flagging: multiple games ended with your flag or opponents flagging in chaotic positions. When you reach the critical phase (big trades or mate threats), slow down 1–2 extra seconds to make safe moves or simplify.
  • Conversion technique under time pressure: when you have an obvious win/advantage (extra material, passed pawn, invading rooks), pick simple, forcing moves that reduce complexity — trades or straightforward advancing — instead of long, risky tactical sequences.
  • Keep an eye on loose pieces (hangs): blitz mistakes often come from a piece left undefended after a tactical sequence. Before each move, do a 1–second check: "Is any of my pieces attacked twice?"
  • Endgame basics: a few lost positions turned on coordination and king activity. Drill simple rook endings, king+rook vs king, and basic passed pawn technique so you convert quicker and with fewer moves.

Mini game notes — concrete takeaways

Win vs kavidaboss (your clean win):

  • You played the center and space plan well: advancing d5 at the right time and recapturing toward the center kept your pieces active and your king safe. That’s textbook and hard to punish in blitz.
  • Keep playing those clear plans in the opening: a small move like a3 (preventing knight/bishop jumps) is practical and effective in blitz.
  • PGN viewer of the win (review the turning point):

Loss vs Gambit224 (time loss after a very tactical phase):

  • You generated strong threats (queen/rook invasions) but the position became very forcing; because your clock was low you didn’t pick the simplest converting continuation and the game ended on the clock. In blitz this is a common trade-off: tactical creativity vs safe conversion.
  • When you have a winning material or decisive initiative and the clock is under 30 seconds, prioritize forcing trades or single-line mate threats over long convoluted tactics.
  • PGN viewer of the decisive game (study the sequence where rooks and checks decide things):

Practical drills (15–30 minutes total) — do these for a week

  • Tactics trainer: 10–15 min daily (focus on mates, forks and rook tactics). Blitz rewards pattern recognition.
  • 10-minute rapid with 5+3 increment: practice converting won positions without flagging. The increment teaches you to trade time for precision.
  • Endgame micro-drills: 10 fast exercises — rook + king basics, outside passed pawn. Spend 2–3 days on fundamentals.
  • One annotated review per day: immediately after a blitz session, pick the most painful loss and write 3 short notes: the critical move, why it failed, and the simpler plan that would have worked.

Short checklist to use during blitz games

  • When your clock < 30s: default to forcing moves, piece trades, and checks — simplify, don’t invent.
  • Before every move: 1-second glance — any of my pieces hanging? Any back-rank weaknesses? Any simple tactic opponent has?
  • If you have a big advantage, ask: “Can I trade into a won endgame in 1–2 moves?” If yes, do it.
  • Keep a “panic move” ready — a single, small prophylactic move (king-move, rook to 2nd/7th) to buy time and remove tactical shots.

Next steps (this week)

  • Do the 15–30 minute drill plan for 6 sessions. Track whether you flagged less.
  • Play two 10+0 or 15|10 games focusing on conversion technique (no speculative sacrifices).
  • Send me one game you lost on time or in a winning position — I’ll annotate the 4–5 critical moves and suggest the safe converting line.

Small motivational note

Your rating history and opening stats show you're strong at picking active openings and creating tactical chances. Fixing two things — calmer time management in the final 60 seconds and a few conversion patterns — will give you an immediate boost in blitz results.



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
coach-botezsisters 1W / 0L / 0D
rougher89ga 2W / 0L / 0D
grilisko 1W / 0L / 1D
dedebgsdu62 1W / 0L / 0D
leaveeyeroseman 1W / 2L / 0D
flaxmax 2W / 0L / 0D
Most Played Opponents
alex51mphp 116W / 17L / 5D
gaetan123456789 39W / 3L / 2D
rostem-e-zal 12W / 31L / 0D
emmanuel-guignard 29W / 12L / 1D
bastou31360 39W / 1L / 1D

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 1995 2081 2211 2211
2024 1951 2105 2109 1666
2023 1894 2104 2148 1051
2022 1814 1892 2046 1765
2021 1829 1914 2024 1637
2020 1677 1804 1693 1645
Rating by Year20202021202220232024202522111051YearRatingBulletBlitzRapidDaily

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 124W / 72L / 5D 114W / 64L / 21D 64.8
2024 449W / 225L / 41D 426W / 258L / 35D 70.8
2023 599W / 417L / 45D 551W / 460L / 54D 66.9
2022 426W / 258L / 30D 401W / 284L / 34D 71.3
2021 593W / 363L / 40D 585W / 385L / 46D 67.9
2020 575W / 312L / 34D 519W / 359L / 28D 61.1

Openings: Most Played

Daily Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
QGD: 2...Bf5 3.cxd5 59 46 12 1 78.0%
Australian Defense 53 45 7 1 84.9%
Slav Defense 53 36 14 3 67.9%
Slav Defense: Alekhine Variation 53 28 21 4 52.8%
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 48 30 13 5 62.5%
Amazon Attack 41 24 15 2 58.5%
Scotch Game 38 23 13 2 60.5%
QGD: 4.Nf3 35 22 13 0 62.9%
King's Indian Defense: Larsen Variation 33 12 20 1 36.4%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 32 24 8 0 75.0%
Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Unknown 285 179 106 0 62.8%
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 274 164 92 18 59.9%
Australian Defense 255 144 97 14 56.5%
Slav Defense: Alekhine Variation 237 150 78 9 63.3%
Scotch Game 205 117 76 12 57.1%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 197 107 81 9 54.3%
King's Indian Defense: Larsen Variation 183 99 73 11 54.1%
QGD: 2...Bf5 3.cxd5 182 116 59 7 63.7%
Italian Game: Two Knights Defense 172 95 70 7 55.2%
Slav Defense 171 90 72 9 52.6%
Rapid Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Scotch Game 73 46 23 4 63.0%
Slav Defense 53 36 15 2 67.9%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 53 37 15 1 69.8%
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 53 32 16 5 60.4%
Australian Defense 43 35 4 4 81.4%
QGD: 2...Bf5 3.cxd5 38 31 6 1 81.6%
Amazon Attack 37 26 9 2 70.3%
Ruy Lopez: Brix Variation 35 19 12 4 54.3%
Amar Gambit 31 20 11 0 64.5%
Italian Game: Two Knights Defense 30 17 10 3 56.7%
Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Australian Defense 59 38 20 1 64.4%
Amazon Attack 22 13 9 0 59.1%
Amar Gambit 20 13 7 0 65.0%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 19 15 4 0 79.0%
QGD: 2...Bf5 3.cxd5 18 11 7 0 61.1%
QGD: Chigorin, 3.cxd5 17 12 5 0 70.6%
Scotch Game 16 10 6 0 62.5%
Slav Defense 16 6 8 2 37.5%
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 15 9 5 1 60.0%
King's Indian Defense: Larsen Variation 15 6 8 1 40.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 19 3
Losing 85 0