Natã Gonçalves, affectionately known in the chess world as Vigg-Sama when he streams, is a Brazilian chess player who holds the National Master title from National. A quick-witted tactician with a love for fast-paced battles, Natã blends serious competition with entertaining online content that keeps his community coming back for more.
Chess career
Over the years, Natã has built a reputation as a relentless Bullet player, with a peak Blitz performance around 2375 in August 2024. He competes across Blitz, Rapid, Bullet, and Daily formats, chasing sharp ideas and punchy tactics. He earned the National Master title from National, a recognition of his consistent results on the board. His preferred time control appears to be Bullet.
Streaming and community
Beyond the board, Natã streams regularly, sharing live games, annotations, and banter with a growing audience. His sessions are known for fast pace, practical takeaways, and a healthy dose of humor—perfect for players who want to learn without losing their sanity.
Opening repertoire and playing style
Blitz highlights include Amar Gambit and Nimzo-Larsen Attack to spark dynamic games.
Caro-Kann and various Sicilian lines feature in his solid, practical toolkit.
Fast-paced Rapid and Bullet sessions showcase aggressive Sicilian and attacking setups.
Known for mixing strategic patience with surprise improvements, often catching opponents off guard in the early middle game.
Connect with Natã
Follow the journey and join the live sessions at Natã Gonçalves or explore his openings and analysis in Openings Catalog.
Coach Chesswick
Positive Aspects of Your Recent Bullet Play
Your recent games showcase several strengths that contribute nicely to your play at bullet pace:
Opening Preparation: You are comfortable with the Nimzo-Larsen Attack as shown in your latest games, which aligns well with your historical opening performance and win rates. This indicates a good grasp of your preferred openings.
Consistent Play & Strategic Awareness: Your games often involve trading queens early to simplify the position, then building up from there. In your wins, you demonstrate solid control of the position through piece activity and pawn breaks.
Strong Endgame Fundamentals: The game where you converted a pawn advantage into a win by pushing passed pawns and actively centralizing your king shows your knowledge of endgame principles.
Time Management: Your clock times suggest that you balance speed and careful play well, managing to keep enough time for critical moments without falling into severe time trouble prematurely.
Areas to Improve
Despite your solid play, there are areas where targeted improvements could raise your bullet results even further:
Handling Opponent Attacks: In your losses, the opponent’s active piece play and threats sometimes catch you off guard. Improving tactical alertness and defensive instincts will be helpful for countering aggressive plans.
Opening Variety & Depth: While your Nimzo-Larsen Attack is working well, broadening your opening repertoire slightly can help you avoid being predictable and better adapt to various opponent styles. Exploring your other good-performing openings like the French Defense or Scandinavian Defense could add versatility.
Time Pressure Tactics: Bullet often comes down to time pressure. Practicing fast calculation and pattern recognition under extreme time constraints can boost your resilience when the clock runs low.
Maintaining Composure Under Pressure: Occasionally, endgame or tactical opportunities are missed in critical moments. Focusing on mental calmness can improve your ability to spot these in bullet.
Suggestions for Focused Training
To build on your current level and make steady progress, consider including these training elements in your routine:
Tactics Drills: Daily practice on tactical patterns common in your openings and typical pawn structures will sharpen your bullet instincts.
Opening Study: Deepen your understanding of your Nimzo-Larsen Attack lines, and experiment with the French or Scandinavian Defenses in practice games to add flexibility.
Speed Endgames: Set up common simplified positions from your games, and practice converting or defending them quickly to improve your technique under time pressure.
Bullet Practice: Keep playing bullet regularly but review your games to spot recurring mistakes—especially blunders or missed defenses in critical spots.
Overall Progress and Trends
Your recent rating trends show a positive and steady improvement in bullet chess, with a 24 point increase over the last month and a generally upward slope in your performance. Maintaining consistent training and focusing on sharpening tactical awareness in fast time controls will help sustain this growth.