Quick summary
Nice run — your rating trend is moving up and your recent wins show good tactical alertness and piece activity. The games also highlight your two main weak points in bullet: time management and occasional back‑rank / king safety lapses. Below I’ll point out what you did well, what to fix, and a short, concrete practice plan you can use between sessions.
Highlights — what you did well
- Active pieces: you repeatedly use rooks and queens aggressively (rook lifts, doubling, checks) to force the opponent into errors.
- Tactical vision in the middlegame: several wins came from concrete calculation and forcing sequences (captures, promotions, mating nets).
- Opening consistency: your statistics show strong results with specific openings (Scandinavian, London Poisoned Pawn, Sicilian Closed) — that stability helps a lot in bullet.
- Conversion instinct: when you get a material or positional edge you simplify or create decisive threats instead of dithering.
Example game you can rewatch:
Primary areas to improve
- Time management — multiple losses ended on the clock or with only seconds left. In bullet you must simplify decision-making: memorize first 8–10 moves of your main openings and use quick standard replies so you save time for critical moments.
- Back‑rank & king safety — a few games show decisive mates or tactics because the king had no luft or escape squares. Build the habit of checking for back‑rank weaknesses before final exchanges and give your king a flight square when convenient (move a pawn or rook earlier if needed).
- Simplify when ahead in time trouble — if you are winning on the board but low on clock, trade down to a simpler winning endgame or force the opponent into passive defense. Avoid long forcing complications when you have under 15–20 seconds.
- Pre‑move discipline — pre‑moves are powerful but dangerous. Only pre‑move captures that cannot be refuted or when you’re sure of the opponent’s reply. Random pre‑moves cost games.
- Tactical oversights in endgames — some losses/mate sequences came from missing a simple knight or rook fork. Quick tactical checks (are any pieces hanging? any forks/pins?) before each move help a lot in bullet.
Opponents to review key moments with: chesswarr1or, thx4thefreelo, Radoslav Genov, Maratonkata.
Concrete drills (daily 15–30 minutes)
- 10 minutes tactics trainer at 1–2 minute problems (focus: forks, pins, skewers, back‑rank tactics).
- 5–10 minutes opening flash: rehearse your first 8 moves in each main line until they are automatic. Use only one or two sidelines you play most in bullet.
- 5 minutes endgame basics: king + rook vs king, king and pawn promotion technique, and simple queen vs rook winning patterns — knowing these saves time and converts better.
- Weekly: 30 minutes of rapid review (watch 3 of your recent games and identify the exact moment your clock started to become a problem; find a practical alternative that keeps the advantage but is faster to play).
Bullet‑specific checklist (use during games)
- Early game (moves 1–10): play quickly — stick to your prepared lines.
- Middle game (moves 11–25): if your clock < 20s, choose safe simplifying moves that keep your advantage rather than long calculation lines.
- Before every exchange: ask “does this create a back‑rank target or a discovered check?”
- Use pre‑moves only when capture patterns are forced (recapture with same piece, pawn advances that can’t be answered).
- If you’re ahead on time but down on the board, create complications; if you’re ahead on the board but down on time, simplify.
Short weekly plan (3 items)
- One focused opening session (30 minutes): deepen lines in your top-performing openings (keep the lines you win with, e.g., Scandinavian and London Poisoned Pawn).
- Three tactical sessions (15 minutes each): emphasis on pattern recognition and speed; track accuracy under time pressure.
- Play a 15+10 rapid game once a week and practice converting simple advantages without panicking the clock.
Mindset and small habits
- When you win a tactical skirmish, take one second to stabilize (a safe developing move) rather than hunting extra material straight away — that often creates counterplay.
- After a loss on time, quickly review where you spent the most time; often it's an unfamiliar opening or an avoidable calculation.
- Keep a short list (3 lines) of “go‑to” openings for both colors in bullet — familiarity beats creativity under severe time pressure.
Next session goals (for your next 10 bullet games)
- Win target: convert 70% of games where you achieve a clear material advantage.
- Clock target: avoid losing by flag more than once; aim to finish with at least 10s on average.
- Quality target: fewer than 2 tactical oversights per 10 games (track with post‑game brief review).
Final note
Your rating and win/loss record show strong fundamentals. With small changes — quicker opening play, stricter pre‑move rules, targeted endgame drills and a focus on clock management — your win rate in bullet should climb quickly. If you want, send 3 specific games you felt uncertain about and I’ll annotate the critical moments move‑by‑move.