Avatar of Dupreeh98

Dupreeh98 IM

Playing Since: 2023-04-08 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Blitz: 2679
122W / 39L / 13D
Bullet: 2688
50W / 36L / 8D

Profile: Dupreeh98

Meet Dupreeh98, an International Master officially crowned by FIDE, who dances gracefully through the chessboard like a grandmaster-in-training with a flair for blitz and bullet games. When it comes to fast-paced chess, this player doesn't just participate—they dominate, boasting peak blitz and bullet ratings soaring above 2700, a level that many aspirants only dream of reaching.

Dupreeh98’s journey is nothing short of electrifying. Starting with a modest blitz rating hovering around 1700 in early 2023, they rocketed upwards at lightning speed — hitting a peak of 2714 by September 2024. Their bullet game is equally blistering, with a top rating of 2704 attained in the spring of 2024, proving exceptional reflexes combined with razor-sharp tactics.

With a career blitz record of 124 wins to just 40 losses, and an impressive bullet win rate near 53%, Dupreeh98 displays resilience and strategic depth that often turns seemingly impossible positions into triumphant victories. Their average game length reflects patience—over 75 moves in wins—and a preference to outplay opponents in long, grueling endgames.

Playing Style & Psychology

This player is all about endurance and mental fortitude. The endgame, which features in 75% of their games, is their favorite battlefield, where they patiently grind down opponents. Despite the swift pace of blitz and bullet chess, Dupreeh98’s average moves per win (75 moves) reveal a penchant for crafty positional play rather than reckless speed blitzing.

Known for an astonishing 81.5% comeback rate after setbacks and a cool-headed tilt factor of just 6, Dupreeh98 keeps calm under fire. If the piece count is unbalanced, they still clutch a win nearly 63% of the time—a true tactical warrior who refuses to surrender.

Signature Stats & Fun Facts

  • Longest winning streak: 22 games (talk about momentum!)
  • Best time to face off: 4 PM – when the mind is freshest and opponents are warned.
  • Frequently uses the mysterious "Top Secret" opening repertoire, which works with a 69% win success in blitz.
  • Prefers to wear White pieces slightly more favorably, boasting a 64% win rate.
  • Most victorious matchup? Taking down lackscreativity, jhaydan12, and a host of others with a perfect 100% win rate—sorry, folks!

Recent Games

Dupreeh98’s recent victories often end by resignation, a polite way opponents say "I give up!" after a brilliant strategic squeeze. A showcase match from February 2025 saw them annihilating opposition with the English Opening Mikenas-Carls-Flohr Variation, finishing with a cunning combination forcing resignation in about 25 moves.

Of course, even great players have off days—like their recent loss to OtherGabe in a sharp English Opening battle. But setbacks only fuel future brilliance for Dupreeh98!

In summary: Dupreeh98 is a formidable International Master who combines tactical brilliance, psychological toughness, and a deadly fast game speed. Whether blitzing through the clock or plotting his way through an intricate endgame, Dupreeh98 keeps opponents guessing and spectators cheering.

Keep an eye on this rising star — the chess queen/king of speed with a secret arsenal ready to unveil!


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice session — you won several cleanly and converted messy endgames into wins. Your opening repertoire (especially the various French Defense lines and the English setups) is working: you get playable middlegames and practical chances. The loss to Xiao Tong shows where you can tighten up in long rook-and-pawn endgames and in handling opponent passed pawns.

What you did well

  • Opening choice and preparation — you consistently steer the game into familiar territory (great results in French Defense: Tarrasch Variation, Chistyakov Defense and French Defense: Exchange Variation). That gives you a strong baseline.
  • Tactical awareness in sharp positions — several wins ended after you found forcing continuations that won material or created decisive passed pawns.
  • Converting advantages in simplified endgames — you showed patience turning rook/queen activity and passed pawns into promotion threats and mate nets.
  • Practical play under pressure — you used active piece play (rook lifts, king marches) to keep the opponent uncomfortable in the late middlegame and endgame.

Key areas to improve

  • Endgame technique — the loss vs Xiao Tong highlights recurring issues in long rook-and-pawn endgames. Focus on defending/blocking passed pawns and avoiding passive piece placements that let the opponent create outside pawns.
  • Pawn structure choices — in a few games you allowed the opponent counterplay by creating weak pawn islands or playing ceding squares (holes) that knights/bishops used as outposts. Be stingier with pawn pushes when the position is simplified.
  • Time management in complex positions — in several long games the clock dips low on critical moves. Spend your extra seconds on “is this tactic available?” and on clear plan changes (not just the next move).
  • King safety in transitions — when you simplify into endgames, double-check active checks and back-rank tactics from the opponent before simplifying queens/rooks.

Concrete next steps (30/60/90 day plan)

  • 30 days
    • Daily: 15 tactical puzzles (focus: forks, skewers, promotions). Keep a log of missed tactics to review weekly.
    • Endgame drills: 3 saved rook endgames per day (defense and conversion). Use simple tablebase or trainer positions.
    • Review two recent wins and the loss vs Xiao Tong — annotate where the evaluation flipped and why.
  • 60 days
    • Build a short “must-know” endgame checklist (opposition, active king, cutting off, building outside passed pawn).
    • Work on one opening line deeper — pick the French/Tarrasch line you play most and prepare 3 replies your opponents use frequently.
  • 90 days
    • Play a focused mini-match (10+0 or 15+10 rapid) using only your strongest opening to test middlegame plans without time pressure.
    • Targeted training: 100 tactics from positions that arise from your favorite openings (to reduce recurring blindspots).

Practical drills and study items

  • Tactics: ladder these — forks, back-rank mates, promotion tactics. Do pattern-repeat sets (15/day).
  • Endgames: 10–15 minutes per session on rook vs rook + pawn, king and pawn races, and queen vs rook basics.
  • Opening: reinforce typical pawn breaks and piece reroutes for your French and English lines. When your opponent trades into an endgame, learn the standard plan (which pawn breaks, which piece to exchange).
  • Post-game review: for each loss/resignation, identify the one move where your situation went from “equal/plus” to “critical”. Write a one-line plan to avoid it next time.

Opening-specific notes

Your opening performance shows real strengths — high win rates in the Tarrasch and Exchange lines. Keep doing what’s working, but:

  • French lines: double-check typical exchanges that create opposite-colored bishop endgames or isolated pawn structures — know when to simplify vs. keep tension.
  • English systems: watch out for early b- or c-file breaks by the opponent; keep a plan for when they play ...c5 or ...b5 to free their game.
  • If you want, isolate one frequent reply you face and prepare a short trap or simplifying plan (3 moves deep) to gain confidence over-the-board.

Useful references: French Defense: Tarrasch Variation, Chistyakov Defense, French Defense: Exchange Variation, English Opening.

Example game — review suggestion

Here’s a compact replay of one of the recent wins. Load it and look for the moment you transitioned from active play to forced material win — note how you used rook activity and a mating net to finish:

Short checklist to use during blitz games

  • Before you move: one-second tactical scan for checks/forks/promotion threats.
  • If you reach an endgame: ask “are there passed pawns or outside pawns?” and place your king actively.
  • Don’t rush simplification — only trade when the resulting pawn structure/favorability is clear.
  • Use your opening prep to save time: if opponent deviates from book, play a safe developing move and re-evaluate.

Final notes & motivation

Your strength-adjusted win rate and opening stats show you have a reliable foundation. Tightening endgames and spending a little training time on rook endgame patterns and blitz time management will yield quick rating gains. Keep the opening weapons you already have, drill tactics, and review the loss to Xiao Tong to lock those lessons in.

If you want, I can:

  • Annotate one of the losses and mark the exact turning moves.
  • Create a 2-week tactics/endgame micro-plan tailored to your favorite openings.
  • Prepare 10 model positions from your Tarrasch/Exchange lines for practice.


🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
curiousdroid 1W / 0L / 0D View
Qilin Bao 2W / 0L / 0D View
pokedex9976 1W / 0L / 0D View
Xiao Tong 0W / 1L / 0D View
sean330 2W / 0L / 0D View
synchroknight 1W / 0L / 0D View
ray20220810 1W / 0L / 0D View
alex_1094 1W / 0L / 0D View
franzzchess 0W / 1L / 0D View
Most Played Opponents
Wei Yi 1W / 9L / 3D View Games
Lennis Martinez Ramirez 1W / 6L / 1D View Games
Alfonso Jose Alfaro Rojas 5W / 0L / 0D View Games
Jerrygu16 2W / 0L / 2D View Games
Vladimir Bilic 1W / 3L / 0D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 2688 2679
2024 2692 2662 2400
2023 2652 2635 2607
Rating by Year20232024202526922400YearRatingBulletBlitzRapid

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 13W / 7L / 4D 12W / 8L / 0D 60.7
2024 25W / 13L / 2D 23W / 13L / 4D 75.2
2023 63W / 25L / 6D 57W / 22L / 10D 71.8

Openings: Most Played

Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Unknown 22 10 12 0 45.5%
French Defense: Tarrasch Variation, Chistyakov Defense 10 9 0 1 90.0%
French Defense: Exchange Variation 8 7 0 1 87.5%
French Defense 8 5 3 0 62.5%
French Defense: Advance Variation 6 5 1 0 83.3%
English Opening: Caro-Kann Defensive System 5 4 1 0 80.0%
English Opening: Mikenas-Carls Variation 5 4 1 0 80.0%
French Defense: Burn Variation 5 2 2 1 40.0%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 4 4 0 0 100.0%
Caro-Kann Defense 4 2 2 0 50.0%
Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 10 2 8 0 20.0%
Döry Defense 5 1 3 1 20.0%
Scandinavian Defense 4 3 1 0 75.0%
Barnes Defense 4 3 0 1 75.0%
Vienna Gambit, with Max Lange Defense 3 2 1 0 66.7%
Sicilian Defense: Closed 3 2 0 1 66.7%
French Defense 3 3 0 0 100.0%
French Defense: Advance Variation 3 3 0 0 100.0%
Catalan Opening 3 1 1 1 33.3%
French Defense: Classical Variation, Svenonius Variation 3 2 1 0 66.7%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 22 3
Losing 6 0
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