Avatar of Eren_ykl0

Eren_ykl0

Playing Since: 2022-09-27 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Rapid: 371
309W / 304L / 67D
Blitz: 222
1W / 1L / 0D

Profile: Eren_ykl0

Meet Eren_ykl0, a rapid chess warrior who battles fiercely on the 64 squares with a rating rollercoaster as thrilling as a rollercoaster in a theme park! Peaking at a modest 620 in September 2022, Eren’s journey has been filled with heroic wins, tough losses, and the occasional graceful resignation (about 11.83% of games ended with “I quit... for now”).

Playing Style & Strengths

Eren is a tenacious endgame fighter, engaging in the final battle in more than 60% of their games. With an average of 54 moves to victory, patience and persistence are clearly part of the strategy. Though the early-game gambits might have their ups and downs, the comeback rate of 74.07% shows this player doesn’t throw in the towel easily—if something goes sideways, Eren fights back with vigor!

Opening Repertoire

Not one to be pigeonholed, Eren experiments across a wide array of openings. Favorites seem to include the Van Geet Opening (boasting a respectable 40% win rate) and its Reversed Nimzowitsch Variation which achieves an even snazzier 46.15% win rate. However, beware if you face Eren in a King's Pawn Opening—their win rate there is a humble 14.29%, proving that even chess gladiators have their kryptonite.

Time & Psychological Profile

Eren's best battlefield? The wee hours at 3 AM, where the stars align and wins soar. On Saturday, the win rate sky-rockets to a fantastic 58.33%, making weekends a time for strategic brilliance (or at least, better luck). With a tilt factor of 6, Eren keeps a pretty cool head, only occasionally rattled when the pawns gang up.

Famous Battles

Recent encounters include thrilling victories over Romanemperor2025 and hoang1726, featuring dazzling tactical strikes like a sneaky Qh5 attack and a classic checkmate delivered with charm and possibly some coffee-induced energy. There have also been some crushing losses—chess is a humbling game, after all—and Eren has faced defeat against opponents like angel4N and brazaca. But every loss is just another lesson in disguise.

Opponent Relations

Eren loves a good rivalry, with multiple rematches against efemert03 and erzingan24. Some adversaries haven’t fared well at all—100% win records against quite a few challengers! There’s always someone waiting for a chance at revenge, though.

In Summary

Eren_ykl0 is a fierce rapid player, embracing both the thrills of victory and the lessons of defeat with good humor and grit. With a quirky mix of openings, somewhat unpredictable ratings fluctuations, and a love for late-night battles, Eren keeps the chessboard as entertaining as a cat meme on the internet.

“Checkmate? Maybe. But it's only one game in the endless saga of pawns, knights, and caffeine.”


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice run lately — you’ve been creating concrete tactical chances and converting some very short games into wins. Your strength-adjusted win rate (~50.5%) shows you’re performing slightly above expectation for your opponents. Your rating trend over the last 6–12 months is strongly upward — keep building on that.

What you did well (patterns I noticed)

  • Sharp tactical instincts: you spotted mating nets in very short time frames (example: the win as Black against theavenger4978 ended with a quick queen finish).
  • Practical aggression: you play for active piece play and immediate pressure (many games feature early pawn thrusts like f6/f5 that create imbalances).
  • Good finishing: when the opponent weakens their back rank or king position you convert quickly — that’s a valuable practical skill in rapid games.

Where to improve (high-impact, common issues)

  • King safety tradeoff: you often push f6/f5 early as Black. It can create attacking chances but also leaves weakening holes around your king. Tactics can go both ways — consider delaying these pawn moves until your king is safer (castled or the center is clearer).
  • Overextending pawns: aggressive pawn grabs or pushes (for example early b- or f-pawn pushes) sometimes give you short-term play but long-term targets. Check whether the pawn gain is worth the resulting weaknesses.
  • Miscalculation in long games / endgames: some losses show a drifting endgame where strategic defense or basic technique would save you. Spend time on simple king-and-pawn and rook endgames.
  • Time management: in several long games your clock gets low. Try to budget time — spend less on routine moves and more on critical decisions (opening transitions, tactical complications).

Concrete next steps — a 4-week improvement plan

  • Daily (10–20 min): tactics puzzles focused on forks, pins, skewers and mating patterns. Aim for pattern recognition of Queen + minor piece mating nets.
  • 3× a week (15 min): opening refinement — keep what works (your wins with the Scandinavian/Amar/Barnes ideas) but make a small checklist for each opening: safe king step (where/when to castle), one pawn move not to play too early (e.g. delay f6/f5 until development is finished).
  • 2× a week (15–20 min): endgame basics — Lucena, simple rook endgames, and king + pawn vs king. These save or convert tight games.
  • Weekly (post-game): review 3 recent games (win/loss/close). Identify one recurring mistake and one recurring success; annotate with a quick “If I had 1 minute more, I would…”
  • Play: keep some longer games (15+10 or 15|0) once a week to practice deeper calculation and time usage.

Notable game review — quick tactical finish

Example: your win as Black vs theavenger4978. You punished White’s exposed king with an immediate queen strike and finished decisively.

Viewer:

  • What you did well: you spotted the central queen hop to the d4 square and finished quickly once White’s king left the normal castled shelter.
  • What to watch: that line worked because White had already weakened the kingside — in other games, avoid creating the same weak squares around your own king before you have tactical justification.

Opening advice

  • Stick to openings where you get clear plans. Your best win rates are in hyper-sharp or offbeat lines (Barnes/Amar/Scandinavian). If you enjoy those, keep them — but make small safety tweaks: plan to complete development before committing to risky pawn moves.
  • If you play the Barnes/Amar lines often, create a short “if my opponent plays X, I do Y” cheat sheet (1 page) so you don’t spend time reinventing during the game.
  • Use the opening phase to trade to comfortable middlegames. Avoid making too many flank pawn moves that create permanent holes near your king.

Mindset & practical tips for rapid games

  • When you see a forcing move (checks, captures, threats) — pause and scan for opponent replies. A 3–5 second extra check can stop a tactic from backfiring.
  • If you’re ahead on the clock, keep pressing — opponents blunder more under time pressure. If behind, simplify positions rather than complicate them.
  • Keep an errors log: one short sentence per lost game (“Why I lost: f6 too early — king exposed”) — patterns jump out fast.

Resources & practice checklist (placeholders you can customize)

  • Tactics: 5–10 checkmate-in-2/3 puzzles daily.
  • Endgames: study Lucena and basic rook endgame templates (10–20 examples).
  • Openings: create a one-page plan for your top 3 defenses/openings and the anti-lines you see most.
  • Post-mortem: annotate one loss and one win per week — ask “what did I miss?” and “what did I do right?”.

Small tailored suggestions based on your data

  • Your recent 6-month slope and win counts show strong growth — keep the habits that produced that (active play + lots of games), but add targeted study as above.
  • Openings with lower win rates (Elephant Gambit, Barnes Defense) are opportunities — either tighten their lines with safer moves or switch to alternatives with a clearer plan.
  • Strength-adjusted win rate ~0.505 means you’re improving vs similar opposition — aim to push that by reducing avoidable weaknesses (king safety, hanging pieces).

Next small goals (this week)

  • Do 10 tactical puzzles each day (5–10 minutes total).
  • Pick one opening line you play often and write a two-move “no-go” list (moves you won’t play until you finish development).
  • Review the loss vs alpsae and write one sentence summary of the decisive error.

Wrap-up

You're on a solid upward trend. Keep your tactical sharpness, tighten king safety, and add a small dose of endgame study and targeted opening "no-go" rules. If you want, I can:

  • Annotate a specific game move-by-move (pick one and I’ll highlight 5 turning points).
  • Build a 2–3 move opening cheat sheet for your favorite defense.

Which would you like next?



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
theavenger4978 1W / 0L / 0D View
pablocaapa 1W / 0L / 0D View
alpsae 0W / 1L / 0D View
kaishaaaz 0W / 1L / 0D View
eli4402 1W / 1L / 0D View
funny-guy23425 0W / 1L / 0D View
mcgowan14 0W / 1L / 0D View
aguila444 1W / 0L / 0D View
songbirdstudios 0W / 1L / 0D View
general-rode 1W / 0L / 0D View
Most Played Opponents
sadee13 1W / 4L / 1D View Games
kolepa38 2W / 1L / 1D View Games
jorgezada 1W / 2L / 0D View Games
princess_sura 1W / 2L / 0D View Games
redemptioon91 2W / 1L / 0D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 222 371
2022 378
Rating by Year20222025378371YearRatingRapid

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 146W / 141L / 34D 149W / 143L / 32D 58.3
2022 7W / 12L / 0D 8W / 9L / 1D 58.2

Openings: Most Played

Rapid Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 163 74 76 13 45.4%
Amar Gambit 101 45 45 11 44.5%
Australian Defense 46 22 21 3 47.8%
Elephant Gambit 32 12 20 0 37.5%
Amazon Attack 32 15 14 3 46.9%
Scandinavian Defense 31 15 12 4 48.4%
Alekhine Defense 30 12 13 5 40.0%
Barnes Defense 24 9 11 4 37.5%
Petrov's Defense 21 9 10 2 42.9%
Philidor Defense 21 10 9 2 47.6%
Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Amazon Attack 1 0 1 0 0.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 8 2
Losing 8 0
🐞 Report a Problem