Meet Cooper Marcheson, a player whose love for the game is as tenacious as a knight's fork
and as resilient as a pawn marching to promotion. With a peak rapid rating of 1235 in 2025, Cooper's
journey from a humble 236 in 2024 to cracking the 1100+ mark is proof that evolution isn’t just for
biology—it thrives on chessboards too!
Known in blitz battles for a sharp 52% win rate over 109 games, Cooper’s tactical awareness is remarkable:
a 100% win rate after losing a piece and a comeback rate of over 77%! Evidently, giving up is not in the DNA.
Cooper's average winning games stretch beyond 65 moves—patience and persistence truly run in the system.
On a molecular level, Cooper seems to thrive under pressure: the longest winning streak clocked at 9 games,
and an engagement in complex endgames 63% of the time shows a brain wired for deep strategic splicing.
Their tilt factor is low (10%), so even when the heat is on, Cooper's neurons fire without a misstep.
Clocking various win rates at different hours and days, Saturdays and early mornings seem to be peak
performance zones, with win rates soaring up to nearly 60%. It’s as if Cooper’s brain cells are programmed
for hyperactivity when the weekend rays hit the board.
Cooper's opening strategy remains a well-guarded secret—aptly named "Top Secret"—but the results say it all:
over 1100 rapid and blitz games played with a respectable winning rate around 50% consistently.
Whether dashing through blitz or orchestrating battles in rapid games, Cooper Marcheson demonstrates an admirable blend
of resilience, strategy, and a pinch of mystery. One might say Cooper is not just surviving the chess ecosystem
but thriving like a true apex predator among pawns and kings.