Avatar of Fever_Code

Fever_Code NM

Playing Since: 2024-02-11 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Blitz: 2906
1598W / 1963L / 381D
Bullet: 3008
2120W / 2861L / 375D

Fever_Code: The National Master with a Blitzing Heart

Meet Fever_Code, a National Master whose chess moves are as fiery as their username suggests. Earning the prestigious National Master title, Fever_Code has stormed the online chess arena with a style that blends tactical cunning and relentless speed.

With a peak Blitz rating soaring at 2855 in early 2024 and a Bullet high reaching a blistering 3003, Fever_Code is no slouch in the fast-paced time controls. Their average blitz rating hovers comfortably around the high 2700s to low 2800s—a true speedster who loves to dance on the board with rapid-fire precision.

Known for a psychological resilience that’s tough to rattle (a tilt factor of just 20 means they keep calm when the heat is on), Fever_Code’s comeback rate is a staggering 86%, proving time and again that giving up isn’t in their dictionary—unless, of course, it’s an early resignation (a modest 0.48%), for those rare moments when even they know when the jig is up.

Opening the game with an adventurous spirit, Fever_Code favors aggressive and dynamic lines such as the Indian Game Knights Variation and the Slav Defense Modern Line in Blitz, with win rates flirting around 50-55%. In Bullet, there's a fondness for the Reti Opening and Scandinavian Defense, channeling a mix of creativity and grappling for initiative even in seconds-ticking games.

If chess is a marathon, Fever_Code’s average win length of 94 moves suggests a deep and strategic battle, with an impressive endgame frequency of over 86%. Clearly, this player enjoys squeezing every last drop of advantage, torturing opponents into submission long after the opening fireworks have faded.

Their recent masterpieces include a clean resignation victory against TargetTheTop with the Indian Game Knights Variation, and a dazzling checkmate over GP9isback23 utilizing the Queens Indian Defense. Even in defeat, Fever_Code’s games are full of rich tactical drama — after all, every loss is fuel for the next blitz storm.

Off the board, Fever_Code might just be the kind of player who resets their clock at 6 AM—their best time to play with a win rate peaking near 57% at 6 AM sharp—because who doesn’t want to start the day with a swift checkmate and a hot cup of coffee?

Whether dominating on the clock or outmaneuvering in the endgame, Fever_Code is a player who embodies passion, precision, and a touch of playful flair—because in their world, chess isn’t just a game; it’s a blazing code to be cracked.


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice run — your rating and trends show you’re on an upward trajectory (strong recent month and 3/6‑month slopes). You win a lot of games by creating practical threats and pushing passed pawns, but time management and some recurring opening lines (notably the Scandinavian Defense) are costing you points. Below are concrete, bite‑size fixes you can apply in your next bullet sessions.

What you did well (from these recent games)

  • Created and pushed a decisive passed pawn in the win vs Kevin Su — you turned a positional edge into an unstoppable pawn advance and promotion chances.
  • Good use of simplification when it helps — trading into an endgame with a passed pawn rather than forcing fairy‑tale complications.
  • Strong pattern recognition and tactics under pressure — you found forcing checks and captures to exploit opponent inaccuracies.
  • Your long‑term trend metrics show consistent improvement — keep the training rhythm that produced the +45 (1 month) and +212 (3 month) gains.

Primary problems to fix

  • Time trouble / flag losses: several games ended on the clock (both wins and losses). In bullet, you’re letting winning positions become risky because of low time. Work on simple decision rules to avoid complicated thinking on the clock.
  • Opening leaks: your Scandinavian Defense record is weaker than average (low win rate in your Opening Performance). Either study the critical lines you face or replace it with one of your higher‑return openings for bullet.
  • Endgame technique under time pressure: converting small material edges (rook + pawn endings, king + passed pawn) should be faster and more automatic — you want set sequences you can execute in 2–3 seconds.
  • Pre‑move and mouse‑accuracy risk: avoid auto‑premoves in positions where a capture or check changes the outcome (queening, backrank threats, discovered checks).

Concrete drills and practice plan (bullet-focused)

  • 10×5 min bullet sessions with targets: every game, force yourself to simplify into a winning pawn ending when ahead. If you can't, make one safe trade per game. Track flag losses — goal: halve them this week.
  • Tactics sprint: 10 minutes daily solving 1–3 move tactics (forks, pins, mates). Aim to recognize motifs in 2–5 seconds — this improves instinctive play in bullet.
  • Endgame reps: drill 10 classic conversions — king+rook vs king, king+pawn vs king, distant passed pawn technique. Use a 1–2 minute blitz or set positions and play them out quickly until execution is smooth.
  • Opening triage: study one Scandinavian Defense mainline per session (10–15 minutes), focusing on the three most common opponent replies and one reliable plan for you. Or drop it in favor of a safer line with a higher personal win rate (look at Amar Gambit / Hungarian Opening — your stats are better there).
  • Mouse & premove policy: practice “no premove in tactical positions” for a session. If you premove, only allow captures that cannot be refuted by simple checks.

Game notes — useful quick takeaways

  • Win vs Kevin Su — you grabbed pawns and turned them into a passed g‑pawn that promoted potential. Good judgement: when you saw the pawn march, you removed distractions and pushed the pawn. Keep doing this: create a single clear plan (push the passer).
  • Loss vs luneity — the game ended on time. You had dynamic chances but spent too much clock on sequences that could be simplified. When ahead materially or positionally, trade pieces and play precise, fast moves.
  • Draw/loss cluster vs luneity pair — recurring pattern: tactical middlegames that transition to long rook‑endgames where your clock was low. Practice short‑cut conversion patterns in rook endings so you can win them with 5–10 seconds on the clock.

Want to replay the win vs PapaJohns? Use the viewer below to step through the critical sequence.

Short tactical checklist for your next session

  • If you’re up material: trade queens and seek a fast conversion plan (pawn push + king activation).
  • If you’re low on time: switch to the “safe moves” mindset — force trades, avoid long forcing calculations, don’t chase theoretical best moves if a 1‑second simple move preserves the win.
  • Before premoving a capture: ask “Is there a check or promotion or intermezzo that refutes this?” If yes, don’t premove.
  • Pick two openings to focus on for a month: one aggressive (where you score well) and one solid defensive line. Study 3–4 typical middlegames for each.

Next session goals (tiny, measurable)

  • Play 20 bullet games with the rule: no premove in which the opponent can check you — track flag losses and reduce them by 50%.
  • Complete 5 rook‑endgame drills from memory in under 2 minutes each.
  • Study one Scandinavian line for 15 minutes and save two clean reply templates to use next game.

If you want I can…

  • Build a 2‑week training schedule tailored to your openings and time control.
  • Create a pocket list of 10 premove-safe patterns and 10 conversion patterns for rook/pawn endings.
  • Annotate one loss of your choice move‑by‑move with short, bullet‑practical alternatives.

Tell me which option you want and I’ll prepare it.



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
bazanji_fan 0W / 2L / 0D View
papajohns 43W / 52L / 7D View
Itgelt Khuyagtsogt 0W / 2L / 0D View
Bojan Maksimović 1W / 1L / 0D View
Zdenko Kozul 7W / 8L / 1D View
VeryOldMuchSlow 0W / 2L / 0D View
Francesco Sonis 4W / 6L / 2D View
vachess17 2W / 0L / 0D View
Colossus9000 2W / 8L / 0D View
name554590 0W / 1L / 0D View
Most Played Opponents
kawhilockdown 48W / 106L / 14D View Games
dazzlinganomaly01 51W / 102L / 9D View Games
Manu David 36W / 93L / 8D View Games
Andy Woodward 14W / 111L / 10D View Games
Anthony Atanasov 32W / 85L / 7D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 2955 2848
2024 2639 2754
Rating by Year2024202529552639YearRatingBulletBlitz

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 1249W / 1441L / 262D 1108W / 1658L / 200D 93.1
2024 681W / 763L / 146D 589W / 855L / 137D 95.6

Openings: Most Played

Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Döry Defense 376 159 178 39 42.3%
Petrov's Defense 324 125 177 22 38.6%
Indian Defense: Przepiorka Variation 270 114 126 30 42.2%
English Opening: Agincourt Defense 247 104 125 18 42.1%
Slav Defense: Bonet Gambit 244 125 101 18 51.2%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 207 81 107 19 39.1%
QGD: Ragozin 134 49 72 13 36.6%
Four Knights Game 130 47 65 18 36.1%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 118 48 62 8 40.7%
Bishop's Opening: Urusov Gambit 105 32 58 15 30.5%
Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Scandinavian Defense 629 224 369 36 35.6%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 511 206 265 40 40.3%
Döry Defense 482 193 249 40 40.0%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 397 143 218 36 36.0%
Australian Defense 385 151 211 23 39.2%
Hungarian Opening: Wiedenhagen-Beta Gambit 289 123 141 25 42.6%
Nimzo-Larsen Attack: Classical Variation 286 97 165 24 33.9%
Indian Defense: Przepiorka Variation 277 120 131 26 43.3%
Amazon Attack 208 90 110 8 43.3%
Amar Gambit 166 77 82 7 46.4%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 17 0
Losing 20 3
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