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Aashvibhatia

Playing Since: 2023-08-07 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Rapid: 226
7W / 14L / 2D
Bullet: 302
832W / 851L / 14D

Profile Summary: Aashvibhatia

Meet Aashvibhatia, a bullet-frenzied chess enthusiast who dances on the 64 squares with a blend of grit and spur-of-the-moment genius. With a peak bullet rating of 484 achieved in May 2025, Aashvibhatia is no stranger to the high-speed chaos where every second counts and blunders are as common as coffee breaks.

In the rapid realm, Aashvibhatia reached a peak rating of 582 back in August 2023 — proof that even when the clock ticks slower, the moves remain sharp and unpredictable. Blitz, however, is a quieter territory with a current rating of 226, but don't let that fool you; every game is a new opportunity to shock opponents.

A Opening Explorer

  • Philidor Defense: The sweet spot with a win rate of 57.14% – clearly a favorite hunting ground.
  • Pirc Defense Maroczy Defense: An impressive 64.29% win rate, showing Aashvibhatia’s knack for unconventional openings.
  • Center Game: Often played and with solid results – wins and losses almost neck and neck, making every game a gripping fight.

Style and Strategy

With nearly half the games reaching endgame tussles (47.63% frequency), Aashvibhatia is not afraid to slug it out till the bitter end. Known to resign early sometimes (7.23% early resignation rate), perhaps to save energy for another bullet battle, but there's also a notable comeback spirit with a 67.13% comeback rate after losing a crucial piece. This player believes in fighting back until the very last rook is caught or the clock runs out.

The Psychological Edge

Tilt factor is a mild 8, which means when the chips are down, Aashvibhatia might internally shout but doesn’t let it ruin the party. Favorite time to play and win? Sharply at 4PM and surprisingly strong in the quiet, often neglected 3-6AM slots – a true night owl or perhaps an early riser with excellent caffeine management.

Rivalries & Memorable Battles

With opponents like "penjahatbaru" and "patrzi" recently wiped off the board by checkmate and time wins, Aashvibhatia brings pressure and patience in equal measure. They've bravely faced players rated far above themselves and have an uncanny ability to exploit the errors of overconfident foes.

Fun Fact

If you ever catch Aashvibhatia online, beware the Center Game and Philidor Defense — these are their comfort zones where magic and madness twine. Expect sharp tactics, sudden sacrifices, and some cheeky knights hopping into the fray. Losing? Probably on time or a wild blunder — all part of the bullet chess rollercoaster ride!

In short, Aashvibhatia is a rising star in the bullet and rapid arenas with a fiery spirit and a playful attitude, ready to give any opponent a run for their money — or their minutes on the clock.

“The clock is ticking... better bring your A-game!”


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice resilience in your recent games — you keep creating tactical chances and you don’t give up easily. That said, recurring patterns (early pawn moves that weaken the king, missed opponent threats, and occasional loose pieces) cost you games. Below are targeted, practical steps to improve rapidly.

What you’re doing well

  • You generate concrete tactical chances and mating ideas — that’s why you score wins even when your rating is lower than opponents.
  • You play actively rather than passively: piece activity and trying to create threats is a good habit to keep.
  • You’re willing to simplify into endgames or race for promotion when the opportunity appears (see several promotion/mate races in your PGNs).

Key areas to improve (high impact)

  • King safety: avoid weakening pawn moves in front of your king (early f6, g5, or repeated pawn pushes). These create holes and tactical targets for opponents. If you play ...f6 or ...g5, have a concrete reason — not just “feeling active.”
  • Opening discipline: simplify your repertoire to a few reliable setups. For example, fix bugs you see with Philidor Defense and Barnes Opening: Walkerling — learn the typical piece placements and one safe plan for the middlegame.
  • Tactical awareness before grabbing material: double-check for opponent counterchecks, forks and discovered attacks before snatching pawns or exchanging. Many losses stem from winning material but leaving the king exposed or a piece en prise.
  • Counting checks/captures/threats every move: before you move, ask “What is my opponent threatening next?” — especially when the center is open or rooks/queens are active.
  • Endgame basics and conversion: when you get a passer or material edge, follow simple rules — activate king, create outside passer, trade down to winning minor piece endgames if ahead.

Concrete 4‑week training plan

  • Daily (15–30 minutes): 8–12 tactics puzzles focused on forks, pins, back‑rank mates and discovered attacks. Build pattern recognition.
  • 3×/week (30 minutes): Opening work — pick 2 black setups and learn the first 10 moves and one practical middlegame plan for each. Drill typical pawn structures and one trap/way to equalize. Start with Philidor Defense if you play it often.
  • 2×/week (20 minutes): Game review — pick 1 loss and 1 win. Before using an engine, write down the candidate moves you saw and why you missed the opponent’s idea; then check with engine for concrete errors.
  • Weekend (1–2 games): Play at slower time controls (15+10 or 15|0). Use these games to practice the plans you studied, not to grind rating.
  • Endgame (once a week, 20 minutes): King + pawn basics, opposition, and promotion races. Practice the Lucena (and basic rook endgame ideas) later when comfortable.

Practical tips drawn from your recent PGNs

  • Against kingside-facing attacks (examples in games vs garvvh): don’t play ...f6 and ...g5 at once unless your king is already safe — those moves open diagonals and leave squares like g5/g6 and h5 exploitable.
  • When your opponent sacrifices (e.g., sacrificial checks or pieces landing on your back rank), pause and check forcing lines — sometimes the “safe” recapture creates decisive counterplay. Make it a habit: before capturing, scan for checks and discovered attacks.
  • Opening play: avoid moving the same piece many times in the opening without completing development. Prioritize king safety (castle early) and piece coordination over grabbing small pawn gains.
  • When you gain material, simplify into a won endgame when it’s clearly winning. If conversion looks unclear, keep pieces on to create practical chances and avoid passive retrenchment.

Simple in‑game checklist (use every move)

  • Are any of my pieces loose or undefended? (Fix before the opponent exploits it.)
  • What are the opponent’s checks, captures, threats next? (Answer them immediately.)
  • Will this pawn move create permanent holes near my king?
  • If I win material, what is the simplest route to convert it?

Next steps

  • Start the training plan this week and track one weekly metric: puzzles solved per day and number of review sessions completed.
  • Play 2 slower games (15+10) this week and deliberately practice the opening plans you drilled.
  • When you finish a game, pick one critical moment and annotate why you chose your move — this habit accelerates improvement faster than engine-only review.

Extras / quick resources

  • Study the typical motifs in Philidor Defense — a small opening cheat‑sheet will save you blunders from unfamiliar positions.
  • Watch one 10–15 minute video on improving king safety and one on basic mating patterns (back rank, queen mates). Short, focused content helps the most.
  • If you want, send one annotated loss (just your notes + moves) and I’ll give line‑by‑line feedback — or paste a key position and I’ll suggest candidate moves.

Want a targeted review?

If you share one game you want to fix (board position or PGN), I’ll give a short move‑by‑move plan for the critical phase and show the safer alternatives. Example opponents I saw in your recent PGNs: garvvh and kritika2021.



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
superafonya 1W / 0L / 0D View
rebluj 1W / 0L / 0D View
kianpouryusef 0W / 1L / 0D View
xydee567 0W / 1L / 0D View
kalraz 1W / 1L / 0D View
abhishek82192 0W / 1L / 0D View
krrrish0007 0W / 1L / 0D View
chess_by_rakib 1W / 0L / 0D View
skzula 0W / 1L / 0D View
tleyba 0W / 1L / 0D View
Most Played Opponents
garvvh 4W / 12L / 2D View Games
panavjava 0W / 3L / 0D View Games
kalraz 1W / 1L / 0D View Games
rogeralar 0W / 2L / 0D View Games
vladyfiladelfie 2W / 0L / 0D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 269 226
2024 226 226
2023 226
Rating by Year202320242025227226YearRatingRapid

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 409W / 373L / 9D 368W / 424L / 5D 45.8
2024 1W / 2L / 1D 2W / 4L / 0D 42.9
2023 5W / 7L / 1D 2W / 8L / 1D 56.7

Openings: Most Played

Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 200 93 105 2 46.5%
Center Game 197 104 90 3 52.8%
Philidor Defense 173 81 91 1 46.8%
Amar Gambit 136 68 67 1 50.0%
Barnes Defense 133 66 66 1 49.6%
Czech Defense 92 55 36 1 59.8%
Amazon Attack 89 44 44 1 49.4%
Scandinavian Defense 66 31 35 0 47.0%
Center Game: Berger Variation 61 27 34 0 44.3%
Bishop's Opening 59 22 37 0 37.3%
Rapid Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 9 2 5 2 22.2%
Philidor Defense 5 2 3 0 40.0%
Amazon Attack 4 1 2 1 25.0%
Bishop's Opening 3 0 3 0 0.0%
Scandinavian Defense 2 1 1 0 50.0%
Unknown 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Scotch Game 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Czech Defense 1 0 1 0 0.0%
Elephant Gambit 1 0 1 0 0.0%
Amar Gambit 1 0 1 0 0.0%
Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 1 0 1 0 0.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 10 2
Losing 9 0
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