Profile: Amir Hossein Abdallah (amir3ho)
Meet Amir Hossein Abdallah, a chess enthusiast whose game plays out like a well-crafted biological experiment—full of openings, defenses, and strategic mutations. Known online as amir3ho, he’s currently evolving on the chessboard with a rapid rating that has blossomed to an impressive 736 in 2025.
Amir’s tactical DNA shows a penchant for classic openings like the King’s Pawn Opening, King's Knight Variation and the Reti Opening Kingside Fianchetto Variation, boasting a 100% win rate in these strategic sequences. Like a cell adapting and evolving, he thrives most in rapid and blitz formats, with a sparkling blitz rating of 757 and a bullet rating niche at 539. His blitz victories are as consistent as mitosis—2 games, 2 wins, no losses.
Throughout his career, Amir has demonstrated remarkable resilience, staging comebacks with a 66.67% success rate after setbacks and an impressive 100% win rate even after losing key pieces—talk about cellular regeneration on the board! With an average of nearly 63 moves per win, his games tend to be long, methodical processes rather than quick reflexes; his style is less “blink and you miss it” and more “slow and steady neuron firing.”
Amir doesn’t just win games; he cultivates relationships with opponents, boasting perfect win rates against some regular contenders like nuraly73, jeromelar31, and farah_quin. His longest winning streak of 3 games matches his current streak, proving he's in the prime of his playing cycle.
Fun fact: Amir's psychological resilience (tilt factor of 2) suggests he remains mostly steady under pressure—even when his rating dips slightly in casual versus rated games. Much like a mitochondrion powering a cell, Amir’s focused energy fuels his consistent performance, especially during peak hours; at 5 AM and 3 PM, his win rate reaches a perfect 100%, turning him into a chess-playing circadian rhythm specialist.
Whether it’s a rapid opening gambit or a complex endgame strategy, Amir Hossein Abdallah continues to replicate and refine his winning formula. Chess might be a battle of minds, but for amir3ho, it’s also about natural selection—outsmart, outlast, and checkmate.