Profile: Asvaloupas
Meet Asvaloupas, a chess player who truly knows how to checkmate biology—with a style that’s as dynamic as cellular mitosis! Bursting through the ranks from a Rapid rating of 559 in 2024 to a sharp spike of 872 in early 2025, Asvaloupas's game evolves faster than a colony of bacteria under the microscope.
Chess Evolution
This player has logged a substantial 471 Rapid games in 2024 alone—winning 246 and drawing 36—proving resilience and a strong opening repertoire. Early resignations are kept low at 3.74%, reflecting a determined fighter who prefers to see the endgame biology of each match through to the last move.
Opening Genes
Asvaloupas’s openings are as varied as a genome, but some stand out like especially dominant alleles. The Queens Gambit Declined boasts a whopping 80% win rate, while the Kings Fianchetto Opening Symmetrical Variation strikes with an impressive 85.7% success. It seems Asvaloupas nurtures these openings like prized specimens in a petri dish, carefully cultivating victories one move at a time.
Playing Style & Tactics
Patience is key in this player’s cellular chess dance: boasting an average of 61 moves per win, Asvaloupas clearly thrives in the lush environment of long, strategic games. Endgames appear in over half the games (53.67%), showing a style that matures and branches out like a healthy neuron network. And when pieces get lost? A perfect 100% win rate after losing a piece reveals an ability to regenerate tactics and adjust to the battlefield.
Psychological Profile
Though the tilt factor hovers at a modest 9—no major mutations of temperament here—there’s a curious dip of nearly 48% in rated vs casual win difference, perhaps indicating Asvaloupas thrives best when under some experimental conditions rather than strictly formal lab tests. Yet, the comeback rate of nearly 68% shows a remarkable cell-like resilience.
Notable Opponents & Rivalries
With a win streak peaking at 9 and a healthy 1-current streak, Asvaloupas's record against frequent opponents like patakiss (92% win rate) and pigeons_gang (75% win rate) suggests a competitive chromosome in the chess genome that favors adaptation and dominance.
Final Notes
Whether flexing the Scandinavian Defense or dancing through a Queens Pawn Opening Accelerated London System, Asvaloupas epitomizes a chess match’s lifecycle—enduring, evolving, and thriving on board stages worldwide. Keep an eye on this player as their rating and style continue to reproduce winning variations.