Avatar of BidakBaruwing

BidakBaruwing

Playing Since: 2019-07-30 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Rapid: 1427
5W / 0L / 0D
Blitz: 2302
7508W / 9176L / 1464D
Bullet: 1360
2W / 0L / 0D

Profile Summary: BidakBaruwing

Meet BidakBaruwing, a force to be reckoned with on the blitz battlefield and a connoisseur of quick maneuvers and cunning traps. Starting with a modest blitz rating of 916 in 2019, BidakBaruwing has skyrocketed to a blistering 2278 by 2025—quite the growth spurt for a chess warrior in the making! Not just content with blitz, they've dabbled in rapid and bullet formats, proving that speed and strategy are both in their arsenal.

With an impressive blitz game count nearing 17,000 matches, BidakBaruwing’s resilience shines through a respectable 41.5% win rate, employing a mysterious opening known simply as "Top Secret" that has bewildered opponents across tens of thousands of games. When not decrypting this secret weapon, openings like the Ruy Lopez Classical Defense prove their finesse, boasting win rates up to a staggering 85.7%.

This player isn’t just about brute force; their comeback rate is a jaw-dropping 84%, showing a knack for turning the tides even after losing a piece—some might say they have the resilience of a chessboard phoenix rising from the ashes. It’s no surprise then that BidakBaruwing boasts a perfect 100% win record after losing a piece, making opponents think twice before celebrating a capture.

Known for matches with long, thoughtful endgames averaging nearly 69 moves, BidakBaruwing prefers to grind out victories with patience and precision rather than quick tricks—though don’t be fooled, their early resignation rate is a humble 0.8%, showing a willingness to fight until the very end or bow out gracefully.

Off the board, BidakBaruwing’s psychological game is unique: a tilt factor of 13 suggests they keep their cool better than most in the heat of battle, and they enjoy higher success in rated matches compared to casual ones. Whether playing as white or black, their win rates hover just above 40%, a testament to their balanced and adaptable style.

These days, expect BidakBaruwing to strike most effectively in the late morning, with their sharpest hour around 11 AM boasting nearly 46% success. And if you want to catch them online, avoid the dark hour of 5 PM—it’s their toughest time, or maybe they’re just distracted crafting another Top Secret opening variation.

So if you’re up for a duel with someone who wields the chess clock like a ninja and plays with the patience of a saint, BidakBaruwing is your opponent. Just remember: they don’t give up easily—sometimes winning right after they lose a piece—and their "Top Secret" opening might just cause your brain to do a double take.

Prepare well, for against BidakBaruwing, every move could be your last!


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice work in these recent blitz sessions — you’re creating concrete winning chances (passed pawns and active rooks) and you convert those chances cleanly when you spot the right tactic. Your win vs rainbowcupcakes65 is a good example: you marched a pawn to promotion and used rooks actively to finish the job.

What you did well

  • Turning an advantage into a passed pawn and promoting it — excellent sense of when to push and simplify into a winning endgame.
  • Active rook play: you look for open files, rook lifts and seventh‑rank infiltration instead of sitting passive.
  • Good ability to coordinate forces (pieces + pawns) so a single passed pawn becomes decisive instead of getting traded off.
  • Opening familiarity in the Sicilian lines — your handling of the Sozin structures is comfortable. Keep reinforcing that with model games (Sicilian Defense: Sozin Attack).

Recurring issues to fix

  • Watch tactical forks and knight jumps. In a loss you allowed a knight fork pattern (a knight jumping to c2 / a1 in one game) that won material. Before each move ask: “Is any piece en prise or can a knight fork my king and rook?”
  • Some exchanges lead to unfavorable endgames. Don’t automatically capture on the first chance — evaluate resulting activity and pawn structure first.
  • Occasional passive piece placement — especially bishops blocked by your own pawns. Try to keep a plan for improving the worst‑placed piece each turn.
  • Time management in blitz: you sometimes let the position get complicated with little clock left. Simplify when you’re ahead on the clock or on the scoreboard; keep complications when you want practical chances.

Concrete practice plan (next 2–4 weeks)

  • Daily 15–25 minutes tactics: focus on forks, pins and discovered attacks. Set a goal: reduce simple tactical blunders by 50% in two weeks.
  • Endgame drills (3× / week, 10–15 minutes): rook + pawn vs rook basics, outside passed pawn conversion and simple king/pawn races. These are exactly the patterns that won you the promotion.
  • Opening work (2× week): one short video or 30 minutes of model games in your favorite Sicilian/Sozin lines — learn 2 typical plans for middlegame pawn breaks and knight outposts.
  • Post‑game review habit: after each session, pick 2 losses and 1 win and spend 10 minutes on them. Ask: “What tactical shot did I miss?” and “What was my opponent threatening?”

Blitz‑specific tips

  • Before you move: quick blunder check — look for captures, checks and threats. Make it a 3‑second routine.
  • If low on time and ahead in material, trade pieces and head to a simple won endgame — don’t keep creating complications.
  • Use pre‑moves only where there’s no tactical counterplay. In sharp positions pre‑moves can become costly.
  • When you have a passed pawn, prioritize activation of major pieces to escort it (rooks behind the pawn, king support if possible).

Mini review — win vs rainbowcupcakes65

Nice demonstration of turning pressure into a decisive passed pawn and then promoting under fire. Replay the sequence around the pawn advance and the promotion — there are a few small tactics you executed cleanly that are worth repeating.

How to review your losses (practical checklist)

  • Identify the first move where your evaluation flipped (from equal/plus to worse).
  • Ask: was that because of a tactic, a bad exchange, or a weakening pawn move?
  • Try to find the refutation you missed — then set a simple pattern card (e.g., “watch for knight forks on c2/a1”).
  • If the loss came from an opening sidestep, add the few moves to your opening notes so you don’t repeat the same slip in blitz.

Small, measurable goals for the next month

  • Reduce blunders by doing a 5‑minute blunder check every game (post‑game: tag 5 blunders and why they happened).
  • Complete 20 tactical puzzles, 5 endgame exercises and 3 opening reviews per week.
  • Review 8 games (4 losses, 4 wins) in depth — keep notes and one living checklist of recurring mistakes.

Optional study links (quick)

  • Review this game again vs rainbowcupcakes65 to internalize promotion technique.
  • Check model games in Sicilian Defense: Sozin Attack for typical piece placement and pawn breaks.
  • Review a loss vs liverpool-chelsea and excmo focusing on the knight tactics that cost material.

Final note — keep it practical

You already have the core skills: active rooks, created passed pawns and the tactical eye to finish games. Tidy up the recurring tactical slips and improve your endgame routine and you’ll convert many more winning positions — especially in blitz. If you want, we can break down one of the losses move‑by‑move next and generate a short checklist of exact moves to watch for.



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
rainbowcupcakes65 2W / 1L / 1D View
liverpool-chelsea 0W / 1L / 0D View
najdorf979 0W / 0L / 1D View
emilch25 1W / 2L / 0D View
excmo 2W / 8L / 0D View
ender131 4W / 8L / 0D View
karmadared 1W / 0L / 0D View
fursinp 2W / 2L / 0D View
mykingdomforahorse5 0W / 1L / 0D View
Alexander Alexikov 1W / 8L / 0D View
Most Played Opponents
JAO_2905 32W / 36L / 0D View Games
brauliodias 23W / 34L / 5D View Games
ivari60 31W / 23L / 3D View Games
canamico 27W / 28L / 1D View Games
Tansel Turgut 16W / 36L / 3D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 1360 2338
2024 2200 1427
2023 2160
2022 2168
2021 2129
2020 2015 1312
2019 980 2215 925
Rating by Year20192020202120222023202420252338925YearRatingBulletBlitzRapid

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 641W / 843L / 135D 661W / 817L / 144D 76.5
2024 412W / 460L / 79D 346W / 528L / 82D 72.4
2023 498W / 554L / 99D 413W / 658L / 95D 72.5
2022 843W / 925L / 133D 797W / 944L / 155D 72.6
2021 732W / 848L / 142D 670W / 928L / 126D 71.4
2020 644W / 715L / 110D 588W / 759L / 126D 72.1
2019 108W / 45L / 19D 93W / 65L / 12D 75.0

Openings: Most Played

Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Ruy Lopez: Classical Defense, Benelux Variation 1172 521 555 96 44.5%
Benoni Defense 992 440 481 71 44.4%
Alekhine Defense 747 324 363 60 43.4%
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 716 281 386 49 39.2%
Scotch Game 614 252 306 56 41.0%
Sicilian Defense: Sozin Attack 604 288 282 34 47.7%
Italian Game: Two Knights Defense 528 206 272 50 39.0%
English Opening: Anglo-Indian Defense 527 203 262 62 38.5%
Caro-Kann Defense 483 203 246 34 42.0%
French Defense: MacCutcheon Variation, Wolf Gambit 412 195 171 46 47.3%
Rapid Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Ruy Lopez: Bird Variation 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Amar Gambit 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Italian Game: Two Knights Defense 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Alekhine Defense 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Unknown 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Elephant Gambit 1 1 0 0 100.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 14 1
Losing 13 0
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