Avatar of Moises Melara

Moises Melara FM

AleMR16 Panchimalco Since 2018 (Inactive) Chess.com ♟♟♟
59.6%- 38.1%- 2.3%
Bullet 1871
280W 221L 8D
Blitz 2143
163W 73L 9D
Rapid 1938
51W 20L 2D
Daily 926
1W 2L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi Moises, here is your personalized game review.

What you are already doing well

  • Dynamic piece play. In several wins you seized the initiative with moves such as 13…f5! against jarekn27972 and 17 g4!? versus theivex. You clearly enjoy sharp, double-edged positions and often out-calculate your opponents.
  • Flexible opening repertoire. With Black you alternate between the Modern/King's Indian Defense structure (…g6, …Bg7, …d6, …e5) and more classical setups; with White you switch smoothly from 1 e4 (Italian, French Exchange, Philidor) to 1 Nf3/Reti. This keeps opponents guessing and is a good long-term asset.
  • Resourcefulness in inferior positions. Several winning games started with a worse evaluation, yet you found tactical chances (e.g. 25 fxg6+! in the win vs. jarekn27972) and turned the tables.

Key themes to improve

  • Time management – your biggest leak.
    • Four of the last seven decisive games were lost on time despite playable positions (e.g. vs. orkund, Macs87).
    • Aim to reach move 15 with ≥55 % of your initial clock. Practise “hand on piece only after seeing the reply” to reduce hovering.
    • Play a daily 10 min rapid game and force yourself to spend at least 30 s on each of the first three critical moves; this will train decision-making pace at longer time controls and decrease panic in blitz.
  • Over-extension of kingside pawns.
    • In losses vs. OrkunD and Sheebah you pushed …g5/…h5 or f- and g-pawns without completing development, weakening dark squares and diagonals against your own king.
    • Before advancing a wing pawn, verify three items: ① All minor pieces developed, ② King has two safe squares, ③ Centre is closed or fully controlled.
  • Tactical conversion once ahead.
    • Even in wins you occasionally let positions slip from +- to unclear because you tried to force matters (e.g. 31 Rc5? vs. Squiss_TheRedBaron).
    • Solution: each day solve 5 “maintain +-” puzzles where the correct move is quiet (consolidating) rather than flashy.
  • Endgame grounding.
    • The resignations against baloghlaszlo and Macs87 sprang from unclear rook endings where basic techniques (cutting the king, creating passed pawns) would have held or even won.
    • Review the “rook on the seventh” chapter in Silman’s Endgame Course and play 20 rook-and-pawn vs. bot positions this week.

Illustrative moment

The following fragment from the Italian game against sheebah shows both a promising start and the sudden collapse once the centre opened while your king remained exposed:


Action plan for the next two weeks

  1. Play 10 rapid (10 + 5) games focusing only on clock discipline; annotate them afterwards marking every move where you spent >45 seconds.
  2. Study 3 model games in the King’s Indian where Black does not push …g5. Note the typical manoeuvre …Nf6-h5-f4 instead.
  3. Daily puzzle routine: 3 intermediate tactics, 2 “protect the advantage” drills, 1 theoretical rook ending.
  4. Finish each playing session with one quick review of your own blunders using Chess.com’s mistake tab—awareness is the fastest cure.

Your progress at a glance

Peak rating: 2062 (2024-11-02)
When you score best:

012345671011121314151617181920212223100%0%Hour of Day

Weekly consistency:
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun100%0%Day of Week

Keep the fighting spirit, Moises—polish these specific areas and the next rating step will follow shortly. Good luck!


Report a Problem