Avatar of Amrit Rana

Amrit Rana

Username: Amritmaster

Playing Since: 2023-09-12 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Daily: 980
14W / 14L / 0D
Rapid: 1350
1292W / 1181L / 74D

Meet Amrit Rana, aka "Amritmaster"

Once a humble apprentice of 400+ rating, Amrit Rana has embarked on a chess journey full of ups, downs, and plenty of pawns sacrificed in the name of glory. From a shaky start in 2023 with ratings bouncing between 400 and 969, Amritmaster has steadily climbed the ranks and, as of mid-2025, proudly boasts a rapid rating peak of 1347. Not too shabby for someone who probably still double-checks if their queen’s safe before castling!

Known for a love-hate relationship with the Italian Game and a cheeky fondness for the Englund Gambit, Amrit has played over 137 games with the King's Pawn Opening—winning just a tiny bit more than half of them. Meanwhile, an impressive comeback rate of nearly 80% shows that when the going gets tough, Amrit bends but rarely breaks.

But it's not just stats and numbers. Amritmaster maximizes tactical surprises with a 52.7% success rate when playing white and holds their own as black too, with a near 49% win rate. Endgames are frequent, often stretching over 50 moves of fierce thinking—a true marathoner of mental chess gymnastics.

Medal-worthy psychological resilience? Check. Despite a modest tilt factor of 10, Amrit thrives in the wee hours, with a curious peak performance around 3 AM—because nothing says "chess genius" like beating opponents while the rest of the world dreams of checkmates.

Playing Style

  • Patient but not a quitter: only 2.77% early resignations.
  • Average winning games last about 51 moves, losses about 64—fighting to the bitter end.
  • A tactician with a flair for comebacks!

Recent Highlight

Never shy of dramatic victories, Amritmaster recently won a thrilling game by checkmate against Shalmanm on June 1st, 2025, after a stunning sequence in an Italian Game variation. It’s safe to say they turned their opponents’ “Na5" knight into just another confused piece on the board.

Friendly Rivalries & Fun Facts

Amrit's top played opponents include mark_master24 and jadriel2011, though chances are they've probably made a few secret allies along the way. The username Amritmaster isn’t just a tag; it’s a challenge to anyone who dares face this crafty strategist!

So whether delivering checkmates or learning from losses, Amrit Rana continues to embody the spirit of chess: strategic, resilient, and unapologetically entertaining. Ready to challenge the master? Just prepare for a battle—chessboard style!


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary for Amrit Rana (Amritmaster)

Nice run lately — your rating chart shows steady improvement and your recent games have clear tactical bite (several short mates and clean tactical wins). Your strength‑adjusted win rate (~52%) and positive trend slopes show you’re trending up. Below I highlight what’s working, what to fix, and a compact training plan to keep climbing.

What you are doing well

  • Sharp tactical vision: you find mating patterns and tactical shots quickly (examples: quick Qxf7 mate and the Rxh8 forcing sequence in recent wins).
  • Aggressive playstyle that creates practical chances — you punish opponents who play passively or make small inaccuracies.
  • Good momentum: your rating history shows consistent growth and resilience after setbacks.
  • Comfort in messy positions and unconventional openings — that can be a weapon when opponents aren’t prepared.

Key recurring problems to fix

  • King safety and back‑rank weaknesses: in your recent loss you were mated by a back‑rank blow — try to keep luft for the king or avoid letting rooks invade the back ranks.
  • Rook coordination and passive rooks: several games show rooks becoming tangled or inactive on the side while opponent’s rooks get onto open files. Prioritize rooks on open/semi‑open files and the 7th/8th ranks when possible.
  • Pawn‑race and passed pawn handling: when the position turns into a pawn race (b‑pawn advanced in the loss), calculate the critical promoting sequences and whether you should exchange rooks or keep them to stop the passer.
  • Reliance on offbeat openings without consistent follow‑up: your opening list includes many unorthodox systems. They give wins, but they also produce inconsistent results — learn the key ideas and typical middlegame plans rather than only move orders.
  • Endgame technique: tighten up rook + pawn endings (basic Lucena/Philidor patterns) so you don’t lose winning chances or get mated in complicated rook endings.

Concrete improvements — position checklist

  • Before every move ask: “Is my king safe?” If not, take time to create luft or trade attackers.
  • When rooks are on the board, prioritize occupying open files and the 7th rank; avoid doubling your rooks on a passive file unless there’s a plan.
  • In pawn races, count squares to promotion and check whether trading a piece helps stop the opponent’s passer — if you’re behind in time, simplify when winning is unclear.
  • If you play offbeat openings, learn 2–3 typical plans for each side of the resulting middlegame (pawn breaks, ideal squares, thematic trades) instead of long memorized move sequences.
  • Improve move selection in critical moments: use a simple calculation routine — candidate moves → checks/captures/threats → shortest forcing lines → pick the safest winner.

Short training plan (weekly)

  • Daily tactics: 12–20 puzzles focused on forks, pins, skewers and back‑rank mates. (15–20 minutes)
  • Endgames: 3× per week, 15 minutes — study Lucena, basic rook endings, and king + pawn vs king. Practice 5 exercises each session.
  • Opening sense: 3× per week, 10–15 minutes — pick 2 repertoires (one for White, one for Black). Learn typical pawn breaks and one model game. Avoid too many irregular lines until you understand the resulting plans.
  • Game analysis: after each session, review 1–2 losses and 1 win. Write 3 takeaways per game (what you missed, what worked, what to practice).
  • Play longer games: 1–2 classical/rapid games per week (15+10 or longer) to practice calculation and endgame technique under less time pressure.

Actionable drills for the next 7 days

  • Day 1: 20 tactics (focus: back‑rank and mating nets). Study a short master game that demonstrates back‑rank prevention.
  • Day 2: 15 minutes Lucena technique + practice 3 rook endgame positions vs engine/human.
  • Day 3: Review the loss vs wartekurz0 with the annotated game viewer below — find the critical moment when the opponent’s passed pawn became decisive.
  • Day 4: 20 tactics (focus: rook tactics and file control). Play one 15+10 rapid game.
  • Day 5–7: repeat mix of tactics/endgame + review one of your opening lines and write down two main plans for you and two plans for the opponent.

Review this loss (playback)

Step through this game slowly — pause at every pawn push and rook trade and ask whether the rooks improved or became passive. Use the viewer and the opponent profile below.

Game viewer:

Opponent profile: wartekurz0

Small checklist before you move (practice this)

  • Threats: Are there immediate tactics (checks/captures/threats)?
  • King: Is there safe escape/luft for my king if opponent gets rooks on the file?
  • Rooks: Which files are open? Can I occupy or contest them?
  • Pawns: Is a passed pawn coming — should I exchange or blockade?
  • Time: If below 30s, simplify when the winning plan is unclear.

Final note

You're on a positive trajectory — keep the tactical training and add focused endgame work and a simple opening plan. If you want, send one more game you feel unsure about (a loss or a draw) and I’ll annotate the critical moments move‑by‑move.



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
russelltie 1W / 0L / 0D View
yanahan 0W / 1L / 0D View
heichman-hiki 1W / 0L / 0D View
humberto_filho 1W / 0L / 0D View
gabbo7777777 1W / 0L / 0D View
poristiy 0W / 1L / 0D View
derkfo 0W / 1L / 0D View
x_miah_x 1W / 0L / 0D View
fireman83 1W / 0L / 0D View
swagger007 0W / 1L / 0D View
Most Played Opponents
mark_master24 4W / 22L / 0D View Games
jadriel2011 2W / 20L / 2D View Games
ajithanbu07 8W / 6L / 1D View Games
homnathdulal 5W / 4L / 0D View Games
seikohm 4W / 3L / 0D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 1350 980
2024 1129 808
2023 582 759
Rating by Year2023202420251350582YearRatingRapidDaily

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 208W / 171L / 10D 180W / 182L / 15D 63.6
2024 378W / 300L / 12D 332W / 331L / 28D 61.5
2023 106W / 127L / 3D 118W / 114L / 8D 50.3

Openings: Most Played

Rapid Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 200 88 103 9 44.0%
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 189 98 84 7 51.9%
Amazon Attack 166 70 90 6 42.2%
Amar Gambit 136 78 53 5 57.4%
Scandinavian Defense 105 56 46 3 53.3%
Australian Defense 102 59 40 3 57.8%
Barnes Defense 100 50 47 3 50.0%
Philidor Defense 95 45 49 1 47.4%
Scotch Game 91 41 43 7 45.0%
French Defense 88 47 38 3 53.4%
Daily Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Modern 6 4 2 0 66.7%
Australian Defense 4 0 4 0 0.0%
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 4 1 3 0 25.0%
Scandinavian Defense 2 2 0 0 100.0%
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 2 2 0 0 100.0%
Amar Gambit 1 0 1 0 0.0%
Center Game 1 0 1 0 0.0%
Czech Defense 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Italian Game: Two Knights Defense 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Giuoco Piano: Tarrasch Variation 1 1 0 0 100.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 10 1
Losing 13 0
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