Avatar of adam657

adam657

Playing Since: 2012-12-10 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Daily: 1532
88W / 43L / 5D
Rapid: 2090
81W / 48L / 12D
Blitz: 2780
7984W / 8025L / 1211D
Bullet: 2798
4038W / 3805L / 479D

Profile Summary: adam657

Meet adam657, a chess player whose journey from humble beginnings to near-grandmaster level is nothing short of a rollercoaster ride across the sixty-four squares. Starting around 2012 with modest blitz ratings hovering just above 1000, adam657 has relentlessly sharpened their skills, achieving a sensational peak blitz rating of 2764 in mid-2025 – that's practically grandmaster territory, with a touch of superhero flair!

In the world of lightning-fast bullet chess, adam657 truly shines. With a peak bullet rating soaring up to 2837, their reflexes are basically a blur, and their opponents often left staring at the board wondering what just happened. This is no mere mortal’s casual pastime; it’s blitzkrieg on the battlefield of pawns.

Don't be fooled by the serious numbers and stats. adam657 has a playful streak hidden behind that calm chess face. Their longest winning streak is a staggering 44 games, showing a zen-like focus that could probably beat a Grandmaster while brewing a cup of coffee. However, with great power comes a few speed bumps—adam657’s longest losing streak capped at 14, proving even the best warriors stumble occasionally (but always get back up).

Speaking of style, adam657 tends to avoid early resignations, preferring to fight through endgames—boasting an impressive average of about 74 moves per win. That means patience and endurance are just as important as tactical genius in their play. Probably why their comeback rate is a mind-boggling 81.34% — giving opponents a severe case of heartburn.

While adam657's white pieces have a slightly better win rate (50.19%) than black (45.99%), their competitive spirit doesn't discriminate. They handle all openings with a secret blend of intuition and flair, with a particularly strong record in games using the "Top Secret" opening and a sneaky fondness for the Caro Kann Defense Advance Tal Variation, which racks up an 80% win rate in blitz. As for the most played opponents, guriempire has had the misfortune to face adam657 206 times — talk about a rivalry!

Notable Games

One recent victory saw adam657 elegantly dismantle DmitryMaximov with the White pieces in a Sicilian Najdorf Freak Attack (ECO B90), winning by resignation after a relentless offensive culminating in a powerful rook checkmate. If chess games were movies, this one would be an action thriller.

Of course, the road to glory includes some losses, such as a tough match against adrianyulo in a Queen’s Gambit Declined variation—showing that even adam657 can be humbled, but always ready for a rematch.

In Summary

adam657 is more than just numbers on a leaderboard; they represent the tireless spirit of a dedicated chess enthusiast who balances strategic depth, rapid-fire tactics, and the resilience to climb back after setbacks. Whether it's bullet, blitz, or rapid, adam657 plays chess with heart, hustle, and a hint of humor—ready to checkmate not just kings, but also the doubts.


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick replay — most recent win

Replay the final position and key moments from your latest win (white vs Nspace3). Use this to jump straight into concrete patterns you executed well.

What you did well

Nice, clear practical play in these rapid-scramble, bullet positions. The themes that stand out:

  • Conversion under pressure: you pressed a passed pawn to promotion and used the new queen immediately — great instinct to simplify when ahead.
  • Active rooks: you repeatedly used your rooks on open files and along the back rank to create threats and force concessions from your opponent.
  • Keeping it simple in chaos: when the position got tactical, you picked the clean route (captures + simplifying trades) instead of hunting for fancy fireworks — efficient for bullet.
  • Good use of checks and tempo to corral the enemy king in the final phase.

Key mistakes / recurring leaks to fix

These are the small habits that cost more often in bullet than you might expect — fix them and your win rate will tick up.

  • Time management in complex positions: one win was “on time” rather than on a clear technical finish. When a win is mostly a time race, keep stronger incremental gains (force trades, reduce the need for long calculation).
  • Loose piece risk in transitions — some moves invite counterplay (knight jumps into your camp / back-rank threats). Before committing a pawn push or piece invasion, scan for enemy checks and tactics.
  • Premoves / hyper-premove habits: in messy middlegames avoid premoves — they turn good positions into blunders. Premove more in clean, forced exchanges or endgames only.
  • Opening choice vs opponent type: you reached middlegame imbalances often from the English / Caro-Kann structures. Be ready with a one-line plan (where to put rooks, which pawn breaks to watch) instead of reacting move-by-move.

Concrete improvements — drills & routines

Short, focused practice beats long unfocused sessions for bullet. Try the following weekly routine.

  • Daily 10–15 minutes tactics: 1 minute per puzzle. Focus on mating nets, forks, skewers and discovered checks — these decide bullet games fast.
  • 3 × 5-minute sessions per week vs slightly stronger opponents. Don’t play endless 1|0 until you’re tired — quality over quantity.
  • Endgame micro-drills (10 minutes): king + pawn vs king, basic rook endgames, Lucena / Philidor patterns. You promoted a pawn in the game — make that conversion automatic.
  • Opening micro-repertoire: pick the 2–3 lines you play most (you used English Opening and Caro-Kann Defense recently). For each line, write one short plan for the first 10 moves: piece placement, pawn breaks, and typical piece trades.
  • Clock discipline drill: play 10 bullet games where your goal is to keep at least 10s on the clock at move 20. Learn to make low-effort safe moves quickly.

Specific technical tips for positions you hit

Based on the games you played recently, here are targeted micro-improvements.

  • Rook activity: put a rook on the 7th or double rooks on open files whenever possible. If you’re ahead in material, simplify into a rook + pawn endgame — opponent’s counterplay is reduced.
  • Passed pawns: when you create a passed pawn (like you did), push it while keeping a piece or rook ready to escort or clear the promotion square. Don’t chase too many winning lines — a single promotion is enough.
  • King safety when attacking: use checks to gain tempo and close escape squares for the enemy king. You used Rh8+/Rhg8+ motifs well; practice sequences where you cut the king off with rooks and knight forks nearby.
  • Tactics hygiene: before committing to captures that open files, run a “3-second tactic scan” — look for forks, skewer or an enemy piece that lands en prise.

Bullet-specific strategy checklist (short)

  • Avoid premoves in volatile positions — only premove in forced captures or when material is being exchanged cleanly.
  • When ahead: trade queens and simplify toward an endgame you know how to win quickly.
  • When equal: keep pieces active, avoid unnecessary pawn moves that create holes or loose pieces.
  • When behind: create chaos — checks, sacrifices, swindles. Use the clock as a weapon but don’t rely solely on flagging against technically savvy opponents.

Next 30-day training plan (easy to follow)

  • Week 1: Tactics daily (10–15m), 5 rapid bullet sessions focusing on clock control.
  • Week 2: Add 15m endgame drilling (pawn+rook patterns), play 3 longer blitz (5|1) games for deeper thinking.
  • Week 3: Work on opening templates for your top two lines (write 1–page plans), keep tactics and endgame maintenance.
  • Week 4: Play a mix: 60% bullet with the new habits, 40% blitz/puzzle review. Review one loss per day and extract the single reason you lost (tactic, time, opening).

Small, repeatable practice beats long irregular sessions. Track one measurable goal: keep average time at move 20 > 10s, or reduce “flag-on-time” losses by half.

Want personalized follow-up?

If you want, send one game where you felt confused and I’ll do a quick 5-point postmortem (blunders to avoid, one improvement, a mini-plan for the next phase).

  • Example request you can paste: “Analyze my game vs Nspace3 — focus on move 34–45 and time management.”


🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
ShiningStar-07 0W / 2L / 0D View
Matic900 0W / 1L / 0D View
the-splinter 0W / 1L / 0D View
terrifiedchess 0W / 1L / 0D View
ritz_carlton 15W / 9L / 0D View
manu_na 1W / 1L / 0D View
sergo055 0W / 1L / 0D View
Thomas Morais 5W / 1L / 0D View
Helgi Olafsson 2W / 0L / 0D View
panabong 1W / 1L / 0D View
Most Played Opponents
Ido Gorshtein 59W / 119L / 28D View Games
Elie Milikow 87W / 38L / 15D View Games
odedglatt 79W / 5L / 0D View Games
ronborcr7 54W / 16L / 7D View Games
Leo Bispo 36W / 34L / 4D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 2826 2665 2090 2090
2024 2776 2670 2090
2023 2644 2502
2022 2536 2495 1998
2021 2541 2547 1922 1532
2020 2559 2517
2019 2355 2507
2018 2248 2378 1529
2017 2336 2215 1922 1566
2016 2119 1981 1830 1685
2015 1927 1922 1797 1483
2014 1357 1460 1708 1141
2013 1285 1348 1649 1191
2012 1128 1073 1042
Rating by Year2012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024202528261042YearRatingBulletBlitzRapidDaily

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 523W / 569L / 86D 515W / 545L / 107D 83.4
2024 789W / 773L / 142D 742W / 845L / 120D 83.9
2023 630W / 600L / 88D 556W / 651L / 92D 80.7
2022 313W / 275L / 52D 275W / 327L / 41D 79.4
2021 590W / 512L / 78D 544W / 573L / 66D 77.1
2020 426W / 389L / 53D 377W / 429L / 53D 77.4
2019 645W / 595L / 86D 568W / 636L / 89D 76.5
2018 709W / 609L / 66D 653W / 665L / 70D 61.8
2017 759W / 692L / 94D 672W / 761L / 95D 71.3
2016 612W / 410L / 44D 559W / 458L / 46D 66.2
2015 316W / 182L / 35D 297W / 204L / 35D 71.6
2014 124W / 82L / 9D 111W / 95L / 7D 59.9
2013 132W / 71L / 7D 132W / 74L / 4D 56.5
2012 11W / 14L / 1D 9W / 19L / 1D 55.6

Openings: Most Played

Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Unknown 1123 654 463 6 58.2%
Caro-Kann Defense 1118 478 563 77 42.8%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 533 235 256 42 44.1%
Sicilian Defense 511 254 218 39 49.7%
Sicilian Defense: Najdorf Variation 455 215 216 24 47.2%
Döry Defense 420 183 201 36 43.6%
Caro-Kann Defense: Karpov Variation 364 162 184 18 44.5%
Australian Defense 362 184 158 20 50.8%
King's Indian Defense: Larsen Variation 284 141 123 20 49.6%
Caro-Kann Defense: Exchange Variation 275 133 126 16 48.4%
Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Caro-Kann Defense 476 216 221 39 45.4%
Amar Gambit 372 185 166 21 49.7%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 357 180 154 23 50.4%
Nimzo-Larsen Attack 350 169 154 27 48.3%
Australian Defense 258 130 116 12 50.4%
Hungarian Opening: Wiedenhagen-Beta Gambit 233 113 110 10 48.5%
Döry Defense 215 100 101 14 46.5%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 202 106 87 9 52.5%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 186 78 95 13 41.9%
Scandinavian Defense 177 75 95 7 42.4%
Daily Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Amar Gambit 21 16 5 0 76.2%
Unknown 10 9 1 0 90.0%
Sicilian Defense 6 5 1 0 83.3%
Barnes Defense 5 4 1 0 80.0%
Döry Defense 5 3 1 1 60.0%
King's Indian Attack 5 4 1 0 80.0%
Australian Defense 4 3 1 0 75.0%
Hungarian Opening: Wiedenhagen-Beta Gambit 4 4 0 0 100.0%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 4 3 1 0 75.0%
Caro-Kann Defense 3 1 2 0 33.3%
Rapid Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Sicilian Defense: Alapin Variation 5 4 1 0 80.0%
French Defense: Exchange Variation 4 2 2 0 50.0%
Caro-Kann Defense 4 3 0 1 75.0%
King's Indian Defense: Larsen Variation 4 0 2 2 0.0%
QGD: 4.Nf3 4 0 4 0 0.0%
French Defense: Advance Variation 4 4 0 0 100.0%
Caro-Kann Defense: Karpov Variation 3 1 1 1 33.3%
QGD: 2...Bf5 3.cxd5 3 3 0 0 100.0%
Australian Defense 3 2 1 0 66.7%
Benko Gambit 3 0 2 1 0.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 44 0
Losing 14 4
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