Avatar of Hilang Harapan

Hilang Harapan

Username: chaosss00

Playing Since: 2025-01-19 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Rapid: 682
159W / 110L / 17D
Blitz: 307
43W / 37L / 5D
Bullet: 434
2W / 0L / 0D

Hilang Harapan: The Chessboard Biologist of 64 Squares

Meet Hilang Harapan, also known by the enigmatic username chaosss00, a player whose chess career in 2025 reads like a thrilling scientific expedition into the kingdom of pawns and pieces. With a peak Rapid rating of 381 and a Blitz max of 236, Hilang has been hard at work turning simple openings into intricate DNA strands of strategy.

Though the name may mean “lost hope,” Hilang’s games are anything but—boasting a solid Rapid win rate with 53 victories out of 101 battles, every move feels like a cell dividing purposefully towards checkmate. This player embraces biology-inspired resilience: a comeback rate of 63.64% and a flawless 100% win rate after losing a piece, proving that even under cellular attack there's room for regeneration and ultimate dominance.

Opening Genes and Tactical Traits

Hilang’s favorite openings read like a genetic encyclopedia. From the Englund Gambit where an 80% win rate shows a killer instinct, to 100% success with the rare Van t Kruijs Opening, this player’s repertoire mutates unpredictably to keep opponents guessing. The Queen's Pawn Opening Chigorin Variation and Alekhine's Defense also lead to impressive win streaks, including a longest unbeaten streak of 8 games—a true period of cell division success on the board!

Psychology and Playing Style: The Mind’s Evolution

Hilang tends to withstand the psychological virus of tilt quite well, with a low 5% tilt factor, indicating a robust mental immune system. The player favors longer endgames (played in nearly 64% of games) and prefers a careful evolutionary path to victory or defeat, averaging about 52 moves per win.

Fan favorites include an impressive 52.83% win rate playing White and 51.92% with Black. Hilang’s battleground is alive every day of the week, with Saturday and Tuesday boasting a 60% win rate—prime mating times in the chess biosphere.

Opponent Record & Social Genome

The player’s social gene pool spans many opponents with impressive 100% win rates over frequent rivals like lazquidios, seveen_dorzhu, and mari00022. Some matches still present evolutionary challenges—like the puzzling 0% win rate against sontol0yoo and chgalanis—but every loss is a lesson in survival and adaptation.

In summary, Hilang Harapan’s chess style is a thriving ecosystem combining bold gambits, resilient recovery, and patient endgames—a living proof that even in the complex biology of chess, hope is never truly lost.


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick overview

Nice upward run — your rating trend is strong and consistent. You’re converting attacking chances and picking openings that suit your style. Below I highlight concrete improvements and a short plan you can use in the next 2–4 weeks.

Recent game highlights

Three recent games I looked at (one quick win, a clean tactical victory, and a loss where an endgame slipped away):

  • Fast win vs omarmohammed2010 — opponent played the early queen sortie; you responded calmly and the game ended quickly.
  • Nice attacking win vs blahh3 — an Italian Game (Italian Game) where you built pressure, sacced for attack, and finished when the opponent’s king became exposed. View the game:
  • Loss vs gdgsghsg — a sharp middlegame that transitioned into a pawn-heavy endgame. Final phase shows advanced passed pawns and lack of counterplay (you were Black). Key opening was related to Caro-Kann Defense. Full game:

Note: one “draw” PGN you provided duplicates the loss — looks like a data duplicate. I used the actual game content when analysing.

What you’re doing well

  • Attacking instincts: you spot king safety targets and can convert tactical sequences — the win vs blahh3 shows clean calculation and follow-through.
  • Opening variety: your repertoire contains aggressive, practical lines (Amar Gambit, Blackburne Shilling) that give you practical chances — your win rates there are excellent.
  • Positive momentum: your rating trends (1/3/6 month slopes) all point upward — that means your training and practice are working.
  • Practical finishing: you force resignations rather than relying on long technical wins — good at turning advantage into a stop-the-clock result.

Main areas to improve

  • Endgame technique and pawn play: in the loss you let the opponent’s passed pawn(s) become decisive. Work on basic king-and-pawn endgames, rook endgames, and converting/defending against a single passed pawn.
  • Defensive resourcefulness: when the position simplifies you sometimes lose counterplay — practice "how to improve" moves and look for keeps in activity instead of passively exchanging down.
  • Time management: you play many 10-minute games — spend less time on obvious opening moves and keep reserve time for critical middlegame decisions. Aim for a stable opening routine to save 1–2 minutes per game.
  • Opening weak spots: your Caro‑Kann results are poor (win rate ~28%). Either review the lines you play there or avoid it until you have a prepared plan — small theoretical gaps are being punished.

Specific, actionable next steps (2–4 week plan)

    - Week 1: Tactics daily — 15 minutes of mixed tactics with emphasis on endgame tactics (blocked passed pawns, promotion threats). - Week 2: Endgame fundamentals — 3x 20–30 minute sessions on king and pawn endings, basic rook endgames, and Lucena/Philidor ideas. Practice converting a single passed pawn vs active rook. - Week 3: Opening triage — pick one Caro‑Kann line you play and learn 4 common plans for both sides (plans, pawn breaks, one model game). Use Caro-Kann Defense as a study anchor. Remove or simplify an opening from your repertoire that gives you many problems. - Week 4: Play focused rapid sessions (10 games): use the checklist below; review two losses in depth (find the single critical move that changed evaluation).

Pre-game checklist (use before every game)

  • Have your opening sequence for the first 8–10 moves memorised (saves 30–90s).
  • Identify whether you want a sharp tactical game or a quiet maneuvering game — pick the opening accordingly.
  • When you get a small advantage, ask: "Can I simplify safely?" If simplification loses active counterplay, keep pieces and play for kingside/center pressure.
  • When down material or position looks bad — trade into an endgame only if the resulting pawn structure or passers help you; otherwise keep complications and look for swindles.

Short tactical and strategic tips

  • When you attack (like vs blahh3), check queen checks first — often they decide the fate of the king. You already do this well; make it a habit to list checks/captures/threats in your head each move.
  • Against pawn storms or passed pawns, activate your king early in the endgame — king activity often beats material when pawns decide the race.
  • If you stick with aggressive openings, learn one defensive backup per opening (a "what if they counter this" plan). It reduces panic when the opponent finds a sharp reply.

Small training tasks (30–60 minutes each)

  • 30-min tactics: 20 medium puzzles focusing on mating nets and blocking passed pawns.
  • 45-min endgame: practice 6 positions — king + pawn vs king, rook + pawn vs rook, and queen vs pawn endgames.
  • 60-min opening: study 1 model game from your Barnes/Amar/Blackburne lines and 1 model game from the Caro‑Kann you play.

Closing — short encouragement

Your upward rating slope and the strength-adjusted win-rate (~58%) suggest you’re doing a lot right. With a little focused endgame work and a tidy opening plan for problematic defenses (like the Caro‑Kann), you’ll make the next leap faster. Keep the attacking instincts, improve the defence, and manage the clock.

If you want, I can:

  • Make a 4-week training schedule tailored to exactly 90 minutes/week.
  • Annotate one loss and one win move-by-move (I can produce an annotated PGN with comments).
  • Give a short checklist for the Caro‑Kann line you actually play — tell me which variation and I’ll prepare it.


🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
gdgsghsg 0W / 1L / 0D View
omarmohammed2010 1W / 0L / 0D View
blahh3 1W / 0L / 0D View
dong-liang 0W / 1L / 0D View
wykqs_09 0W / 0L / 1D View
ideathpool 1W / 0L / 0D View
rdg_terra 0W / 0L / 1D View
rikoubidou 0W / 1L / 0D View
kingsjiszgzf 0W / 1L / 0D View
sashatal 1W / 0L / 0D View
Most Played Opponents
sigmazla 6W / 11L / 0D View Games
kramzzafton 0W / 2L / 0D View Games
milo_keren12 0W / 1L / 1D View Games
philibert21 1W / 1L / 0D View Games
zyns_31 0W / 2L / 0D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 434 223 658

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 99W / 67L / 10D 85W / 75L / 12D 61.1

Openings: Most Played

Rapid Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 33 14 17 2 42.4%
Amazon Attack 27 15 10 2 55.6%
Amar Gambit 25 16 9 0 64.0%
Barnes Defense 16 11 5 0 68.8%
Australian Defense 16 9 6 1 56.2%
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 14 9 4 1 64.3%
Caro-Kann Defense 14 4 8 2 28.6%
French Defense 10 6 3 1 60.0%
Petrov's Defense 9 4 3 2 44.4%
Scandinavian Defense 9 4 5 0 44.4%
Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 6 4 2 0 66.7%
Barnes Defense 5 3 1 1 60.0%
Four Knights Game 5 0 5 0 0.0%
Amazon Attack 5 3 1 1 60.0%
Dresden Opening: The Goblin 5 1 4 0 20.0%
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 4 1 3 0 25.0%
Scandinavian Defense 4 2 2 0 50.0%
Amar Gambit 4 1 2 1 25.0%
Philidor Defense 3 3 0 0 100.0%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 2 0 2 0 0.0%
Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Giuoco Piano: Tarrasch Variation 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Dresden Opening: The Goblin 1 1 0 0 100.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 8 0
Losing 7 1
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