Deepak Sharma — The Chessboard Biologist
Deepak Sharma, also known in the chess ecosystem as Anshdeep33, is a player whose games are as intricate and fascinating as the DNA double helix. Starting from humble beginnings with rapid ratings crawling around 164 in 2023, Deepak’s chess ELO has evolved robustly, reaching a peak rapid rating of 1292 in 2024 and crossing the 1000-mark in blitz and daily formats in the same timeframe. His latest rapid rating in 2025 stands at a respectable 1072, showing a resilient adaptability typical of a fine specimen surviving tough evolutionary pressures!
Like a well-adapted organism, Deepak's approach to openings reveals a preference for healthy, balanced "genetic sequences" — favoring the Italian Game and Philidor Defense in rapid matches, both with winning rates above 50%. Notably, his “Indian Game” boasts a particularly dominant 57.5% win rate, proving it’s not just his genes but his moves that have strong vitality.
Deepak’s tactical awareness is something that would make a biologist proud: a stellar 100% win rate after losing a piece, and an impressive comeback rate of over 70%. He’s got nerves of steel in the face of adversity, showing that even when mutations occur on the chessboard, he can reverse evolutionary disasters and turn the tables with a flair few can match. His early resignation rate is low at just 4.4%, meaning he rarely gives up on a game before the endgame — a true testament to his staying power.
Statistically speaking, Deepak’s white pieces win 52.3% of the time, slightly outshining his black pieces’ win rate of 48%. Notably, his average moves per win hover at nearly 59 moves — a long journey to the checkmate, but then again, nothing worth evolving comes quickly! His psychological “tilt factor” is a modest 10, meaning he keeps his cellular structure intact under pressure.
When it comes to preferred times for action, Deepak’s performance "peaks” aligns with early mornings and late nights — the 0 and 23 hours boast over 62% win rates, suggesting his mind thrives in the tranquility of dawn and midnight. Curious indeed, perhaps a circadian rhythm enchantment at play!
Opponents beware: Deepak has a few recurrent rivals he's challenged multiple times, including jon_bnega_don (16 games) and satyamchess143 (14 games), showcasing a competitive sibling rivalry in the vast evolutionary tree of online chess.
Fun fact:
Like a steadfast protein that adapts in a dynamic cellular environment, Deepak is a player who neither folds early nor lets a small disadvantage mutate into a lethal blow. He’s truly a living organism on the chessboard that evolves, adapts, and occasionally outsmarts predators in the wilds of online competition!
Deepak Sharma — where chess meets biology in a mate that’s a real cell-ebration.