Profile: chinok1217
Meet chinok1217, a resilient chess enthusiast navigating the ever-evolving game of kings with the precision of a cell in mitosis and the strategic foresight of a predator stalking its prey. Starting in 2023 with a modest rapid rating of 1167, chinok1217's chess genes mutated and adapted, peaking impressively at 1746 in 2024 before stabilizing around 1588 in 2025—proof that evolution in chess is survival of the fittest move.
With a rapid win-loss record close to 52% wins over losses, chinok1217’s game is like DNA replication: intricate, faithful, and occasionally prone to the thrilling unpredictability of a mutation—sometimes leading to brilliant victories, occasionally to cute losses. Their resilience stats are impressive too, boasting a comeback rate of 82%, showing they often bounce back from setbacks like mitochondria reviving a tired cell. And when down a piece? They pull off a perfect 100% win rate, proving that losing a molecule doesn’t mean losing the organism.
Known to stay in the game for the long haul, their average moves per win and loss hover around 70, indicating a penchant for well-fought battles that stretch the synapses and test endurance. This doesn't surprise those familiar with their opening repertoire, where the Scandinavian Defense reigns supreme with a fierce 64.5% win rate—a bold and aggressive approach that’s as straightforward as a ribosome translating mRNA.
On the psychological front, chinok1217 displays a mild tilt factor of 8, reminding us that even the best players sometimes need to take a deep breath (or a neuron to fire a calming signal). Their stamina resembles a diligent amoeba, rarely giving up early (early resignation rate only 1.82%), and embracing complex endgames in 73% of matches, truly the chess equivalent of cellular mitosis—where every stage counts.
In rapid battles, chinok1217 dances fluidly between the classic elegance of the Italian Game and the tactical shenanigans of the Sicilian Defense Bowdler Attack, showcasing a diverse "genome" of openings. Daily games reveal a love for the Giuoco Piano, with a sharp 80% win rate contributing some sonic boom to the opponent’s mitochondria.
Whether playing on a Monday morning (winning 57% of games, the prime time for neuron firing) or at the magic hours of 18:00 and 19:00 with a striking 100% win rate, chinok1217’s timing is as impeccable as a circadian clock syncing metabolism.
Always evolving, sometimes mutating, but forever thriving on the 64-square petri dish—chinok1217 embodies the beautiful complexity of chess biology, where every move is a molecule, and every game a living experiment.