Chess Biography: Ashutosh Sharma (ashutoshsharma28)
Meet Ashutosh Sharma, a chess player whose strategies evolve like a fascinating game of natural selection on the 64-square petri dish! Starting with humble Rapid ratings in 2020 at 745, Ashutosh’s ELO quickly adapted and mutated through the years, achieving a peak Rapid rating of 1498 in 2025. Not just a Rapid enthusiast, Ashutosh experiments across Blitz and Bullet formats, displaying a dynamic range of opening “genes” that keep opponents guessing and boards alive.
Opening Genome Sequence
- Rapid Favorites: Kings Pawn Opening (70% win rate) and Italian Game (65.6%) dominate Ashutosh’s opening “phenotype,” showing a bias toward classical, sturdy paths.
- Blitz Repertoire: The Scandinavian Defense Mieses Kotrc variation thrives with an impressive 69.6% win rate, proving Ashutosh’s knack for sharp, aggressive mutations.
- Bullet Moves: The Bishops Opening Boi Variation is Ashu’s kinetic mutation, boasting a 72.2% win rate—fast and fierce like an adrenaline spike in dopamine receptors!
Performance and Tactical Immunity
With a 70.4% comeback rate, Ashutosh’s resilience is like a strong immune response—never giving up when the pawn structure is compromised. What’s more, an impeccable 100% win rate after losing a piece signals that sacrificing “cells” is part of the greater survival strategy. The low early resignation rate (3.33%) confirms Ashutosh’s tenacious fighting spirit, much like a stubborn mitochondrion generating energy even in tough conditions.
Behavioral Traits & Psychological Fitness
Despite some tilt indicated by an 8 on the tilt factor scale—everyone’s human under chess microscope—Ashutosh usually recalibrates better than a well-tuned enzyme. The rated vs casual win difference suggests a bit of stiff competition in formal settings, but this is nothing a few evolutionary cycles can’t improve!
Chronobiology of Chess
Time-wise, Ashutosh’s peak “neural firing” happens around 20:00 (61.2% win rate), and early mornings show a solid metabolic baseline with 53%+ wins between 6 AM and noon. Saturday and Sunday matches exhibit a slight proliferative advantage, ruling weekends with a ~56% win rate that keeps the chess lineage strong.
Social Chloroplasts and Opponent Interactions
Facing “oishikiiiii” most frequently (19 battles) and maintaining wins against many with perfect success rates, Ashutosh has built an ecological niche within the chess community. The diversity of opponents resembles a complex ecosystem where Ashutosh’s strategy adapts like a versatile phenotype thriving in varied environments.
In short, Ashutosh Sharma isn’t just playing chess, but orchestrating a biological symphony of moves, adaptations, and comebacks—evolving in style and substance, one game at a time.