Avatar of Dominik Švec

Dominik Švec

Username: Dohralsi

Playing Since: 2020-11-05 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Daily: 1042
5W / 1L / 0D
Rapid: 1066
490W / 467L / 60D
Blitz: 1135
1552W / 1506L / 238D
Bullet: 1171
1670W / 1627L / 168D

Dominik Švec: The Cellular Strategist of Chess

Meet Dominik Švec, a chess player whose moves are as calculated as DNA replication and whose battle tactics might just inspire a few evolutionary puns! Known online as Dohralsi, Dominik’s ratings tell the tale of a player constantly evolving—sometimes mutating his strategies, sometimes exhibiting the resilience of a cellular defense mechanism.

Rating and Performance Evolution

Dominik’s chess genome reveals peak blitz ratings around 1044 in recent years, with rapid play peaking at a sturdy 1310. He swarms over his opponents with a Blitz win-rate hovering just above 50%, and his Endgame Frequency hitting a robust 70%, proving that when the pieces start differentiating, he is in his element.

Opening Repertoire: A Genetic Code for Victory

Like the perfect protein folding, Dominik’s openings carry a biological twist. In blitz, the Scandinavian Defense Mieses Kotrc Variation gives him nearly a 48% win rate—quite the dominant allele in his opening gene pool. The Bishops Opening is where he truly thrives with over 52% wins, a minor but mighty mutation shaking up his opponents’ defenses.

Tactical Adaptations and Comebacks

When faced with adversity, Dominik’s comeback rate is an astonishing 74.2%, and his win rate after losing a piece is a flawless 100%. Talk about cellular repair on the chessboard! Like a mitochondrion fueling the cell, his tactical awareness powers him through challenging positions into victories.

Playing Style: The Life Cycle of a Game

He keeps his early resignation rate low at 0.77%, refusing to apoptose prematurely. His average moves per win are around 63, showing patience akin to cell growth cycles, while losses extend to about 75 moves, suggesting he battles on like a tenacious neuron firing its last signal.

Psychological Traits: Staying Calm in the Cellular Storm

With a relatively mild tilt factor of 11, Dominik maintains mental homeostasis even under pressure. Though his rated games bring a tougher biome than casual ones, the chess environment remains rich in learning and adaptation for him.

Opponent Relations and Social Biology

Dominik has interesting win/loss dynamics with many opponents, showcasing selective pressure on certain rivals and symbiotic relationships with others. His ability to sustain winning streaks (longest being 17 games) shows evolutionary fitness unmatched by many.

In summary, Dominik Švec is a player who thrives within the complex ecosystem of chess, exhibiting cellular-like precision and evolutionary resilience—always adapting, always evolving, never in stasis. Keep an eye on this bio-organic strategist as he continues to replicate success across the 64 squares!


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick recap for Dominik Švec

Nice run — you’re winning sharp, tactical bullet games and your rating trend is rising fast. You repeatedly create mating nets on the kingside (pawn storms, rook lifts, queen checks) and you convert when the opponent blunders or runs out of time. That’s a reliable, practical style in 1-minute chess.

Example finish (clean, forcing finish you used in one game):


What you’re doing well

  • Direct, focused attacks: you frequently open the g‑ and h‑files and bring rooks and queen into the attack quickly — that creates immediate practical problems for the opponent.
  • Tactical awareness: you spot and execute forcing sequences (captures on g6/g7, sac on g7, back rank mates) — that’s a huge bullet strength.
  • Time pressure play: you convert opponents’ clock mistakes and defend well when ahead on the clock. That’s part skill, part psychological pressure — you apply it well.
  • Opening consistency: you repeatedly steer games into similar pawn structures and kingside attacking set-ups (similar to / Modern setups). This gives you repeatable motifs to exploit.

Biggest weaknesses to fix (fast wins in bullet)

  • Reliance on opponents flagging: several wins come from timeouts. Work on converting cleanly so you don’t depend on the clock if the opponent defends accurately.
  • Occasional unsound sacrifices: aggressive sac ideas win a lot, but they’re risky vs stronger opponents. Before sacrificing, check: is the attack forced, or can the defender trade and survive?
  • Endgame conversion: when the position simplifies, sometimes you let counterplay or a resource slip. Basic king-and-pawn / rook endgame technique will turn more games into clean wins.
  • Time management spikes: in some games your clock gets very low late in the game. Build a small, stable pre-move and thinking routine to avoid panic blunders in the last 15 seconds.

Concrete drills & short plan (next 2 weeks)

  • Daily 10–15 minute tactic sets: focus on mating patterns, rook lift tactics and discovered checks (15 puzzles/day). Use puzzle rush or a tactics trainer and stop after 15 solid solves.
  • Pattern training: run through 20 examples of the exact mating nets you use (rook on the 7th / rook + queen on the back rank). Repeat until you can see the idea in 1–2 seconds.
  • Endgame essentials: 10 quick exercises on basic rook + king vs rook, king + pawns, and opposition. Converting simplified positions reliably will raise your win conversion rate.
  • Focused practice sessions: play 30 bullet games but impose one rule — don’t rely on pre-moves except for safe captures. This forces better time management and reduces Mouse Slip / Fingerfehler mistakes.
  • Post-game micro-analysis: after each session pick 2 losses and one unclear win. Find the one turning moment in each game (5–10 minutes total). That’s high ROI for bullet improvement.

Practical checklist to use in-game (1-minute friendly)

  • Before you sacrifice: can the defender trade pieces and neutralize the attack? If yes, don’t sac unless you’re ahead on time and it’s a practical weapon.
  • When you see open g/h files: look for rook lifts and queen checks first — force the defender’s king into a confined box.
  • Loose pieces: double-check your hanging pieces before you move — a single loose piece loss in bullet is often fatal.
  • Flag plan vs clean convert: if ahead on time, simplify to a won endgame; if behind, keep complications going but only when tactically justified.

Small weekly routine (3 items)

  • 3 tactical sessions × week (15 min each) — focus on mates, forks, pins, and deflections.
  • 1 analysis session × week (20–30 min) — pick your most instructive loss or narrow win and annotate the turning point.
  • Play 100 bullet games this week but track: how many wins were by mate vs timeout. Aim to increase mate/clean-win share.

Notes & useful links

Study a few high-quality examples of successful pawn storms vs fianchetto kings (you played this repeatedly). Replay the win above and the one where you finished with a rook+queen combination. If you want, I can extract 3 turning positions from your recent games and give short tactical checks you should ask yourself during the game.

Opponents to review (pick one game vs each): %3Cjasbo%3E, %3Ctayrold%3E, %3Cgiovanchies%3E



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
arshia-shak 1W / 0L / 0D View
blupsyy 1W / 0L / 0D View
imamoronftw 0W / 1L / 0D View
niro7 1W / 0L / 0D View
chrisjam22 1W / 0L / 0D View
aliosa75 1W / 0L / 0D View
gillyflipper 1W / 0L / 0D View
jagadishhsmart 1W / 0L / 0D View
vadkulkarni 0W / 1L / 0D View
maverick672 0W / 1L / 0D View
Most Played Opponents
timotejiscool 16W / 1L / 0D View Games
minko188 6W / 0L / 0D View Games
bhavanigouda 4W / 1L / 0D View Games
cagnusmarlsenedp 0W / 4L / 0D View Games
Martin Horný 2W / 1L / 1D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 1331 1144 1066 1042
2024 799 1175 951
2021 960 1031 1045
2020 1048 887 1127
Rating by Year20202021202420251331799YearRatingBulletBlitzRapidDaily

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 1288W / 1217L / 165D 1273W / 1244L / 156D 74.4
2024 240W / 242L / 38D 256W / 234L / 35D 72.3
2021 115W / 99L / 6D 104W / 102L / 13D 65.6
2020 178W / 152L / 24D 158W / 165L / 16D 65.2

Openings: Most Played

Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Barnes Defense 590 304 258 28 51.5%
Amar Gambit 315 154 142 19 48.9%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 292 146 133 13 50.0%
Czech Defense 277 141 118 18 50.9%
Scandinavian Defense 258 121 129 8 46.9%
French Defense 138 69 64 5 50.0%
Caro-Kann Defense 135 54 73 8 40.0%
Australian Defense 118 66 49 3 55.9%
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 86 47 38 1 54.6%
Philidor Defense 75 33 38 4 44.0%
Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Barnes Defense 359 173 160 26 48.2%
Scandinavian Defense 308 144 143 21 46.8%
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 227 109 103 15 48.0%
Philidor Defense 140 62 66 12 44.3%
Czech Defense 132 59 61 12 44.7%
Caro-Kann Defense 115 58 47 10 50.4%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 113 53 52 8 46.9%
French Defense 107 59 41 7 55.1%
Australian Defense 102 46 48 8 45.1%
Amar Gambit 97 48 44 5 49.5%
Rapid Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Scandinavian Defense 89 48 37 4 53.9%
Australian Defense 78 43 28 7 55.1%
Scotch Game 66 39 22 5 59.1%
Barnes Defense 64 31 28 5 48.4%
Philidor Defense 58 22 34 2 37.9%
Amazon Attack 55 27 24 4 49.1%
Amar Gambit 42 19 19 4 45.2%
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 37 14 20 3 37.8%
Czech Defense 33 17 13 3 51.5%
Center Game 33 15 13 5 45.5%
Daily Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Amar Gambit 2 2 0 0 100.0%
Barnes Defense 1 0 1 0 0.0%
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Bishop's Opening 1 1 0 0 100.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 17 2
Losing 11 0
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