Profile Summary: alebke
Meet alebke, a chess enthusiast whose rating journey resembles the cycle of life—sometimes blossoming, sometimes shedding leaves, but always striving for growth. With a peak rapid rating hovering around 1200 and a determined presence since 2019, alebke's chess cells have divided well across Rapid, Daily, and Blitz genres, engaging in over 670 battles that would make even the fiercest queen bee ponder their strategy.
This player has mastered biological parallels: just like species adapting over generations, alebke sharpens tactics with a comeback rate of 72.94% and an impeccable 100% win rate after losing a piece—proving resilience akin to a phoenix rising from its ashes, or a chessboard’s own mitosis moment. Their endgame frequency (53.46%) shows an appetite for the final showdown where pawns might transform into queens and chromosomes meet destiny.
An opening connoisseur, alebke has danced through the Sicilian Defense (82 games, 50% win rate), Philidor Defense and even flirted with the aggressive Kings Pawn Opening King's Knight Variation—where they boast a striking 71.43% win rate. Clearly, alebke is no stranger to evolutionary strategies, opting for both defense and offense, adapting openings like DNA mutating to suit the environment.
Despite an early resignation rate of just 2.79%, alebke's psychological profile reveals a mild 8-point tilt factor, showing human-like susceptibilities amidst calculated moves. Their win rates fluctuate with the day and hour, peaking impressively during early mornings and evenings, much like a circadian rhythm dictating peak cell activity.
In the vast ecosystem of opponents, alebke’s predators and prey vary, with glorious 100% win records against many, although some adversaries have been tough nut to crack (or tough mate to deliver). With an average game length of about 56 moves in wins, alebke’s matches are marathons of mental metabolism, fueled by strategic energy and tactical enzymes.
Whether it’s the queen’s gambit or the ant eater’s gambit (just kidding), alebke keeps evolving with each game—proof that in the biological game of chess, survival depends not just on strength, but on adaptation, resilience, and a pinch of humor. Keep an eye on this player—a real biological wonder on the 64-cell grid!