Avatar of Bicha Rraco

Bicha Rraco

Username: bicharraco

Playing Since: 2012-03-06 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Blitz: 2532
921W / 735L / 88D
Bullet: 2505
13836W / 12919L / 1001D

Bicharraco: The Bullet Blaze

Meet Bicharraco, a fierce competitor in the world of online chess, known for blazing through bullet games at a lightning pace that would make a bullet train feel sluggish. Since 2012, Bicharraco has been battling on the 64 squares with an undeniable passion and an impressive rating that once soared above 2630 in blitz and hovered around 2400+ in bullet chess.

Playing Style & Strengths

Bicharraco loves the thrill of the endgame, with an 80.64% frequency of endgame play and a remarkable comeback rate of over 91%. In fact, don’t be surprised if you think you've got the upper hand when suddenly Bicharraco pulls a winning move out of nowhere—especially since their win rate after losing a piece is a perfect 100%. Opponents beware: surrendering quickly isn’t their style, and they average around 70-76 moves in games, showing stamina and strategic depth beyond the fast flash plays.

Opening Arsenal

Master of variety, Bicharraco favors solid, strategically rich openings like the Queen’s Pawn Opening Accelerated London System with a strong 54% win rate, the Caro-Kann Defense (52% wins), and various Indian Games. On the blitz circuit, they show a 70% win rate with the King’s Indian Defense - Samisch Steiner Attack, so challengers often find themselves navigating tricky, original lines.

Record-Breaking Streaks

With the longest winning streak clocking in at 22 games, Bicharraco has proven they can steamroll foes when in the zone. Currently holding a modest 3-game win streak, they are always ready to surprise next.

Stats & Numbers That Tell the Tale

  • Bullet Total: Over 25,000 games with 12,558 wins!
  • Blitz Total: 1,542 games with a solid 810 wins.
  • Top Bullet Rating: 2634 (achieved in 2021, proving age is just a number!)
  • Time Control Favorite: Loves the bullet pace but is equally capable in blitz battles.

Recent Battles

In their latest exciting encounter, Bicharraco played the Nimzowitsch Larsen Attack with White and won on time against bedazzle99, demonstrating quick tactical dominance and practical time management. The game showcased brilliant knight maneuvers and aggressive rook lifts before concluding a swift victory.

Personality & Quirks

Known for a tilt factor of 20 (which means occasionally the inner tempers flair), Bicharraco’s competitive fire shines through with every game. They are not afraid to throw their queen into the fray—sometimes even humorously sacrificing material only to bounce back stronger. When life gives you pawns, Bicharraco makes them queens… or at least tries to before losing on time!

Final Thought

Whether you're facing Bicharraco in a bullet duel or a blitz skirmish, expect a cunning warrior who knows their openings, thrives in long battles, and refuses to fold under pressure. Keep your eyes peeled, though—this player might just pull off a comeback that looks suspiciously like chess magic.


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice run — your blitz games show strong tactical instincts and good conversion skills. Your recent wins featured sharp attacking play and quick exploitation of opponent errors. The loss highlights a recurring practical area to polish: endgame technique and clock management in 3|0 blitz.

What you're doing well

  • Fast tactical recognition — you spot tactical shots (sacrifices, forks and queen checks) and convert them quickly (example: the decisive Qxg3 finish in the Richter/Veresov game).
  • Active piece play — you prioritize piece activity and open files, often producing a decisive initiative (see the games where rooks get onto 7th/open files).
  • Opening variety and surprise value — you get good results with aggressive/less-mainstream systems (Modern, Sämisch-type positions and the Amazon-style attacks).
  • Finishing mentality — you keep pressing till the opponent resigns instead of settling for a safe shuffle.

Main areas to improve

  • Endgame technique — the loss shows trouble converting/managing simplified king-and-pawn endings. Opponent king activity and passed pawns decided the result. Practice basic king+pawn and rook endgames so you convert or hold with confidence.
  • Time management in 3|0 — several games dip into serious time pressure. When short on the clock you make suboptimal simplifications or miss defensive resources. Learn simple “save the clock” habits (quick developing moves, safe pre-moves only when obvious) and practice with small increments (3|2 or 5|0 training) to build rhythm.
  • Pawn-structure decisions — sometimes you allow opponent pawn breaks or advance your kingside pawns creating holes. Be cautious about pawn grabs and premature pawn storms without piece support.
  • Consistency in quieter positions — when the position becomes less tactical you sometimes drift into passive moves instead of improving piece placement or creating concrete plans.

Concrete next steps (one-week plan)

  • Game review: pick the loss and one sharp win. Use an engine to find the 3–5 critical moments and write down the one alternative you should have played each time.
  • Tactics: 15–20 puzzles daily focusing on mating nets, forks and queen tactics (you already win with these — make them automatic).
  • Endgames: 3 short drills (10–15 minutes each) — king+pawn vs king, basic rook endings, and opposition/wrong-color bishop patterns. Do 3 sessions this week.
  • Clock training: 20 blitz games at 3|2 or 5|3 this week to build confidence with increment, then return to 3|0 for 10 games trying to reach move 10 with at least 30 seconds left.
  • Opening refinement: keep the lines that score well (Modern, Sämisch structures) and prune or refresh theory in openings with low yield (if you play the French, revise common tactical traps and typical pawn breaks).

Short checklist to use during a blitz game

  • Moves 1–8: finish development and castle; avoid weakening pawn moves unless you gain clear compensation.
  • If you get a tactical chance — calculate 2–3 forcing continuations quickly; if unclear, play a safe improving move and keep tension.
  • When ahead: simplify into an endgame only after checking pawn structure and king activity — avoid unnecessary trades that give your opponent counterplay.
  • In time trouble: swap to a “practical chess” mindset — avoid long calculations, play plans that improve pieces and reduce opponent counterplay.

Practice drills — 30/60/90 day targets

  • 30 days: make 300 tactics (focus on forks, pins, queen tactics) and 30 blitz games aimed at keeping 30s+ on the clock at move 10.
  • 60 days: secure basic rook and king+pawn endgames; convert 80% of won rook endgames in practice positions.
  • 90 days: narrow opening repertoire to 3–4 reliable lines you know well and can play quickly; increase your strength-adjusted win rate by tightening conversion in simplified positions.

Examples & resources (quick)

  • Study the tactical finish from your win vs Christoph Scheerer. Open the quick replay:
  • Review your loss vs Christoph Scheerer to map where king activity and passed pawns decided the game.
  • Focus opening study on lines that perform best for you (Modern, Sämisch and your Amazon-type attacks) and trim low-performing choices like the French unless you enjoy them and will study them deeply.

Final advice — practical and motivational

You already have the tactical eye and the ability to press for wins. Turn those strengths into a steadier rating gain by improving endgames and clock habits. Small, consistent daily work on tactics and a few targeted endgame studies will bring the biggest bang for your blitz buck. If you want, pick one game and I’ll do a move-by-move postmortem with concrete alternative moves and a short improvement plan.



🆚 Opponent Insights

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Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 2503 2532
2024 2205
2023 2192
2021 2235 2401
2019 2405 2457
2017 2302 2315
2016 2311 2351
2014 2187
2013 2212 2202
2012 2303 2226
Rating by Year201220132014201620172019202120232024202525322187YearRatingBulletBlitz

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 461W / 358L / 29D 422W / 387L / 34D 73.8
2024 3W / 4L / 0D 3W / 3L / 0D 56.5
2023 0W / 1L / 0D 1W / 0L / 0D 31.0
2021 61W / 49L / 5D 36W / 78L / 7D 70.2
2019 158W / 127L / 15D 130W / 150L / 16D 78.8
2017 66W / 78L / 2D 64W / 80L / 3D 74.6
2016 795W / 755L / 47D 735W / 824L / 51D 74.7
2014 0W / 2L / 0D 2W / 0L / 0D 62.0
2013 272W / 226L / 24D 282W / 229L / 10D 74.9
2012 1147W / 777L / 58D 1109W / 810L / 73D 75.0

Openings: Most Played

Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Caro-Kann Defense 64 31 28 5 48.4%
Döry Defense 52 25 25 2 48.1%
Australian Defense 43 23 18 2 53.5%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 29 17 11 1 58.6%
French Defense 28 8 18 2 28.6%
Amar Gambit 27 14 13 0 51.9%
Modern 26 16 10 0 61.5%
King's Indian Defense: Sämisch Variation, Bobotsov-Korchnoi-Petrosian Variation 24 15 8 1 62.5%
Alekhine Defense 23 9 14 0 39.1%
Nimzo-Indian Defense: St. Petersburg Variation 21 11 9 1 52.4%
Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Australian Defense 475 251 211 13 52.8%
Amar Gambit 377 200 163 14 53.0%
Döry Defense 304 153 143 8 50.3%
Caro-Kann Defense 298 136 152 10 45.6%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 282 148 125 9 52.5%
Alekhine Defense 267 133 124 10 49.8%
Scandinavian Defense 261 146 105 10 55.9%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 234 131 94 9 56.0%
Modern 209 116 86 7 55.5%
Sicilian Defense: Closed 208 120 81 7 57.7%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 16 0
Losing 15 2
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