Profile: cam114499
Meet cam114499, a rapidly evolving chess organism thriving in the ecosystem of rapid games. With a current rapid rating hovering around 1230-1248 in recent seasons, this player exhibits a resilient genome marked by an average of 1194-1216 ELO points and a hearty collection of 900+ rapid victories among over 930 battles fought on the board.
Cam114499’s playing style could be described as a biological paradox—possessing an early resignation rate under 1%, yet with an exceptional appetite for the endgame, engaging in it over 82% of the time. Moves are carefully crafted and often stretch over 70 per win, like a well-adapted species persisting through the evolutionary arms race. This player’s comeback rate is a whopping 86%, and even more astounding, the win rate after losing a piece is a perfect 100%, showcasing an uncanny ability to morph and recover in adverse conditions.
Opening DNA
- Queen’s Pawn Opening forms the major limb of cam114499's repertoire, boasting a 55% success rate over 200+ rapid battles—truly the dominant allele!
- Philidor Defense offers a balanced 47% win rate, like a cautious predator stalking vulnerabilities.
- Other openings like Englund Gambit and Pirc Defense show respectable performances, hinting at a flexible genotype prone to experimentation.
Behavioral Traits
Despite being a tactical creature, cam114499 has a modest tilt factor of 9 - a testament to mental resilience and steadiness under pressure. The player exhibits a ‘black or white’ kind of competitiveness, with a nearly equal win ratio for both White (49.6%) and Black (47.2%) sides.
Fascinatingly, Saturdays are the prime day for hunting down wins with a perfect 100% win rate—perhaps cam114499’s natural prime time for superfine logic and strategy deployment. Early mornings between 6-8 AM also show heightened tactical prowess, suggesting a circadian rhythm calibrated for chess evolution.
Opponent Ecosystem
Cam114499 has sparred with numerous opponents, achieving perfect success against many and displaying mixed genetics against a few others. The longest winning streak recorded is 10 games, illustrating bursts of dominant fitness in vivo.
Whether thriving in queen’s gambits or fending off opponents in grueling endgames, cam114499 is a formidable member of the chess biosphere, continuously adapting, conquering, and evolving on the 64-square petri dish.