Overview — broskistrovski, chess player profile
broskistrovski is an energetic, rapid-loving chess grinder known for imaginative opening choices and a cheeky endgame sense of humor. SEO keywords: chess profile, rapid chess, blitz specialist, openings, tactics, broskistrovski.
Preferred time control: Rapid (plays confidently across Bullet and Blitz as well). Career highlights include long winning streaks and explosive comeback ability—equal parts calculation and bravado.
- Strong suits: fast tactics, long decisive games, and creative opening play.
- Notable raw totals: Blitz wins 3,693 / losses 2,184 / draws 253; Bullet wins 2,029 / losses 1,258 / draws 113; Rapid wins 135 / losses 60 / draws 12.
- Peak moments: 2063 (2025-09-13), 2020 (2024-10-03), 1846 (2025-08-18).
Playing style & strengths
Expect long tactical melees and a player who converts small advantages into full points. Games often go deep—broskistrovski averages 73–77 moves in decisive games—so endurance and calculation depth are trademarks.
- Endgame frequency: high (often outplays opponents in long games).
- Comeback rate: impressive — thrives in chaotic positions and after material swings.
- White/Black win balance: consistently strong with both colors (White win rate ~60.6%, Black ~59.7%).
Favorite openings & trends
Openings are where broskistrovski truly shines — a mix of offbeat gambits and flexible flank play that keeps opponents guessing.
- Top Blitz weapons: Amar Gambit, Nimzo-Larsen Attack, Australian Defense, Scandinavian.
- Bullet staples: Nimzo-Larsen Attack and Modern; very comfortable in sharp, asymmetrical systems.
- Rapid favorites: Scandinavian and Nimzo-Larsen Attack (noted for very high win rates in Rapid play).
Example openings performance highlights — Amar Gambit (Blitz): 1,029 games, ~65% win rate; Nimzo-Larsen (Bullet): 1,630 games, ~59% win rate.
Learn more about signature lines: Amar Gambit · Nimzo-Larsen Attack
Memorable moments & a tiny tactical demo
Longest winning streak: 24 games. Known for late-night surges (peak win rates around 00:00–01:00 and 23:00), so beware if you queue up at midnight.
Small illustrative mini-game (clickable viewer compatible):
Rivalries & most-played opponents
Frequent opponents include a rogues' gallery of familiar usernames — long repetitive clashes yield both classic wins and teachable losses.
- Most-played: thegoodoil (47 games), killer-d (28), thethtun (26), t-dan84 (21), bojanzivanovic1969 (20).
- Notable head-to-head: versus thegoodoil — 25 wins, 19 losses, 3 draws; versus t-dan84 — dominant scoring (16–5).
Streaks, timing & meta
Time-of-day and weekday patterns show surgical precision: highest hourly win rates around midnight and early-morning hours; weekends are strong too.
- Longest winning streak: 24; current winning streak: 5.
- Best days: Saturday and Wednesday have particularly high win rates.
- Tilt factor: moderate — keeps a healthy comeback rate even after setbacks.
Tips if you face broskistrovski
- Avoid early simplifications — they excel in long tactical middlegames and endgames.
- Study offbeat openings and gambit traps; they play a lot of Amar Gambit and Nimzo-Larsen motifs.
- Be patient in time scrambles — late-game technique can decide the result.
Data & interactive widgets (placeholders)
Quick visual: recent performance trend (Blitz)
Peak ratings (clickable stats): 2063 (2025-09-13) · 2020 (2024-10-03) · 1846 (2025-08-18)
Opponent profile quick-links: thegoodoil · t-dan84
Final note
Whether you're queueing into a midnight bullet or a thoughtful rapid, expect flair, stubborn endgame play, and a few unexpected gambits. If you beat broskistrovski, brag responsibly — if you lose, study the mishaps and come back ready to defend your pieces (and your pride).
Quick summary
Nice run — you're converting advantages, creating passed pawns and finishing games. Your Scandinavian and Alapin results show you understand imbalanced, tactical positions. A few recurring issues (tactical oversights, hanging pieces, and occasional poor piece coordination) cost you clean wins; fixing them will give a big bump to your conversion rate.
What you did well (recent games)
- Pressure and conversion: In several wins you built passed pawns and used them decisively (promotion in the Italian game and strong rook activity in others).
- Opening selection: You get practical, fighting positions with Scandinavian Defense and the Sicilian Defense: Alapin Variation — both show strong win rates for you; keep using the lines you know well.
- Practical clock play: You won on time in the Noni_Bear game — you apply pressure in complex positions so opponents crack under time. (noni_bear)
- Tactical alertness when on the attack — you spot mating nets and promotion tactics quickly and convert them cleanly.
Recurring mistakes & patterns to fix
- Loose/hanging pieces and back-rank exposure — in your recent loss you allowed a sequence where White picked up material with a queen invasion (moves like Qxc6+ followed by Qxa8). Before pawn pushes or knight moves, double-check if any piece becomes undefended or a square becomes available for a queen tactic.
- Weak square control — watch for c6/c7 and back-rank squares getting weak after pawn moves on the queenside. Opponents often exploit those squares with forks or queen checks.
- Trading decisions under pressure — sometimes you trade into unfavourable endgames or allow opponents to simplify into a position where their passed pawn or piece activity becomes decisive. When ahead, prefer trades that maintain your passer or reduce the opponent’s counterplay.
- Time management swings — you press the clock well, but avoid relying on flags. Spend an extra 10–20 seconds on critical tactical decisions (captures, checks, promotions).
- Missed prophylaxis — small defensive moves (rook lifts, pawn covers, stepping the king to safer squares) would have avoided some of the tactics you faced. Consider the opponent’s checks and forks before committing to plans.
Concrete next-step plan (weekly)
- Daily (15–25 minutes): Tactics drills focused on forks, pins, skewers and mating nets. Prioritize patterns that appear in your games (queen forks, knight forks, back-rank mates).
- 2× per week (30–45 minutes): Review one loss and one close win deeply. Replay the game from move 10 onward and ask “What changed the evaluation?” Mark the key turning move and test a better alternative. Use engine after you’ve tried your own line.
- 1× per week (45–60 minutes): Endgame practice — rook endgames and basic queen vs rook/pawn promotion technique. Convert the types of endgames you reach in your wins (passed pawns + rook activity).
- Opening tune-up (weekly, 20–30 minutes): Polish your Scandinavian and Alapin repertoires. Work on typical middlegame plans and one common tactical motif per opening (e.g., knight jumps to d5/c4, rook lifts on the 3rd rank).
Short tactical checklist (use during games)
- Before any pawn push on the flank: scan for undefended pieces and queen checks on the now-opened file.
- Before a capture or exchange: ask “Does this create a fork/skewer or leave a back-rank weakness?”
- If your king is central and the position opens: prioritize king safety (rook behind pawns, create luft or centralize the king to a safe square).
- When ahead in material: trade to reduce counterplay, but avoid trades that activate the opponent’s pieces or create passed pawns for them.
Short practice drills
- Tactics sets: 5–10 focused puzzles per day (sets on forks/knight tactics + back-rank mates).
- Mini-game training: play 1–2 rapid games at 15+10 where your goal is to finish without time scrambles; review one mistake after each game.
- Endgame micro-session: ten 5–10 minute positions of rook + pawn vs rook — practice converting or defending.
Game review — a position to study now
Replay the Noni_Bear game from the critical middlegame and look for moments where your opponent could have punished a different move. Use the explorer below to step through the moves and find where back-rank/queening tactics become available.
Final notes & motivational nudge
Your rating trend and recent gains show you’re learning quickly — keep the focused routine above for the next 6 weeks and you’ll tighten up the tactical leaks that cost games. Small, consistent practice (tactics + one game review) will convert those good openings and middlegame chances into steady rating growth.
- Pick one recurring tactical theme from your losses and drill it until it becomes automatic (e.g., queen forks, back-rank awareness).
- Keep playing your Scandinavian lines — expand a couple of move-order responses so you’re comfortable in the typical middlegames.
Want a quick follow-up? Share one game you want to deeply analyze and I’ll annotate the key turning points move-by-move.
🆚 Opponent Insights
| Recent Opponents | ||
|---|---|---|
| blee02 | 1W / 1L / 0D | View |
| finduilas | 1W / 0L / 0D | View |
| sleeper2024 | 1W / 0L / 0D | View |
| decasanfelip | 1W / 0L / 0D | View |
| anilchamp | 1W / 0L / 0D | View |
| 1xprada | 1W / 0L / 0D | View |
| totgarcia220 | 1W / 0L / 0D | View |
| b-777-er | 1W / 0L / 0D | View |
| rettie1 | 3W / 0L / 0D | View |
| gevadderfrost | 0W / 1L / 0D | View |
| Most Played Opponents | ||
|---|---|---|
| thegoodoil | 25W / 19L / 3D | View Games |
| killer-d | 15W / 12L / 1D | View Games |
| thethtun | 12W / 14L / 0D | View Games |
| t-dan84 | 16W / 5L / 0D | View Games |
| bojanzivanovic1969 | 13W / 5L / 2D | View Games |
Rating
| Year | Bullet | Blitz | Rapid | Daily |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 1935 | 2035 | 1846 | |
| 2024 | 1931 | 1967 |
Stats by Year
| Year | White | Black | Moves |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 2555W / 1393L / 141D | 2486W / 1415L / 157D | 75.8 |
| 2024 | 405W / 355L / 37D | 411W / 339L / 43D | 76.8 |
Openings: Most Played
| Blitz Opening | Games | Wins | Losses | Draws | Win Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amar Gambit | 1029 | 668 | 320 | 41 | 64.9% |
| Nimzo-Larsen Attack | 844 | 536 | 270 | 38 | 63.5% |
| Australian Defense | 387 | 217 | 146 | 24 | 56.1% |
| Scandinavian Defense | 375 | 215 | 150 | 10 | 57.3% |
| Modern | 340 | 203 | 120 | 17 | 59.7% |
| Barnes Defense | 302 | 180 | 109 | 13 | 59.6% |
| Elephant Gambit | 262 | 148 | 101 | 13 | 56.5% |
| Sicilian Defense: Alapin Variation | 251 | 138 | 105 | 8 | 55.0% |
| Alekhine Defense | 140 | 88 | 43 | 9 | 62.9% |
| Caro-Kann Defense | 138 | 90 | 44 | 4 | 65.2% |
| Bullet Opening | Games | Wins | Losses | Draws | Win Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nimzo-Larsen Attack | 1630 | 960 | 618 | 52 | 58.9% |
| Modern | 708 | 433 | 253 | 22 | 61.2% |
| Australian Defense | 262 | 167 | 83 | 12 | 63.7% |
| Amar Gambit | 217 | 133 | 79 | 5 | 61.3% |
| Modern Defense | 153 | 77 | 72 | 4 | 50.3% |
| Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation | 114 | 65 | 41 | 8 | 57.0% |
| English Opening | 49 | 31 | 14 | 4 | 63.3% |
| Barnes Defense | 29 | 11 | 17 | 1 | 37.9% |
| Modern Defense: Averbakh System | 28 | 19 | 9 | 0 | 67.9% |
| Scandinavian Defense | 24 | 13 | 11 | 0 | 54.2% |
| Rapid Opening | Games | Wins | Losses | Draws | Win Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scandinavian Defense | 45 | 29 | 11 | 5 | 64.4% |
| Nimzo-Larsen Attack | 28 | 21 | 6 | 1 | 75.0% |
| Amar Gambit | 13 | 5 | 7 | 1 | 38.5% |
| Barnes Defense | 11 | 9 | 1 | 1 | 81.8% |
| Modern | 9 | 4 | 4 | 1 | 44.4% |
| Bird Opening: Dutch Variation, Batavo Gambit | 8 | 5 | 3 | 0 | 62.5% |
| Alekhine Defense | 7 | 5 | 2 | 0 | 71.4% |
| Sicilian Defense: Alapin Variation | 6 | 5 | 1 | 0 | 83.3% |
| Australian Defense | 6 | 3 | 3 | 0 | 50.0% |
| Bird Opening | 4 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 75.0% |
🔥 Streaks
| Streak | Longest | Current |
|---|---|---|
| Winning | 24 | 5 |
| Losing | 11 | 0 |