Quick summary
Nice run — big recent rating jump (+189) and a clear upward trend. Your opening repertoire (especially the Sicilian Defense / Dragon Variation and Scandinavian Defense) is producing real results, and you're winning lots of practical games in faster time controls. Below I highlight what's working, recurring problems from the PGNs you sent, and a short plan you can start using right away.
What you're doing well
- Opening preparation: your win rates in Sicilian Defense and Scandinavian Defense are strong — you steer games into familiar territory.
- Practical time‑play: you convert advantages quickly and win on the clock when needed — excellent for bullet.
- Passed pawn creation: you push connected pawns confidently (recent games show successful c‑pawn advances into passers).
- Active rook play: you use rooks on open files and the seventh rank effectively to generate decisive threats.
- Consistency and momentum: the recent +189 and positive trend slope show real improvement.
Recurring issues to fix
- King safety / back‑rank weakness. In your last loss the opponent exploited an open file to mate. Small luft or safer pawn moves around the king can prevent these tactical finishes.
- Missed defensive resources. A couple of games show you overlooking simple checks/exchanges that neutralize opponent counterplay — add a quick checks/captures/threats scan to each move.
- Reliance on flagging. Winning on time is fine, but sharpen conversion technique so you don’t need to rely on the clock every time.
- Loose pieces in sharp lines. The Dragon/Yugoslav and some Sicilian continuations create tactical fireworks — practice typical tactics in those lines to stop dropping material.
Concrete drills & short study plan (2 weeks)
- Tactics daily (10–15 min): focus on back‑rank mates, forks, skewers, discovered checks. Do timed puzzles (10–20s) to simulate bullet pressure.
- Opening micro‑work (3 sessions): for your top 3 lines (Sicilian Defense, Dragon Variation, Scandinavian Defense), learn 3 tactical themes and 3 common traps to avoid.
- Endgame basics (2 sessions): rook + pawn fundamentals and passed pawn technique — practical conversions win many bullet games.
- Postgame review: every session pick 2 losses and 2 close wins — write down the turning moment and one fixable habit.
Practical bullet tips to use immediately
- When ahead: exchange queens or simplify to remove counterplay — simpler positions are easier to convert on the clock.
- When under attack: checks and captures first. Always scan for a forcing intermezzo or trade that blunts the attack.
- Pre‑move discipline: don’t pre‑move when captures/checks change the position; save pre‑moves for quiet stretches.
- Avoid weakening pawn moves around your king (g/h files) unless you calculated the tactics.
- Turn passers into clear plans: if you create a passed pawn, identify a route to promotion or a forced simplification that wins material.
Example sequence to practice
Practice the typical pawn breakthrough and rook support that turns a pawn majority into a passer. Use this short opening sequence to warm up tactical vision:
Checklist before each game
- Opening goal: decide a simple plan (develop, castle, fight center).
- Two‑second habit: scan for checks/captures/threats every move.
- Pre‑move rules: only pre‑move when no tactical refutations exist.
- Conversion rule: if materially ahead, trade down to a won endgame; if behind, seek complications and tactical chances.
30/60/90 day focus
- 30 days — tactical sharpness and pre‑move discipline.
- 60 days — deeper opening knowledge: memorize motifs and a safe response to common sidelines.
- 90 days — endgame technique and consistent conversion practice (rook endgames, outside passed pawns).
Final note
Your recent streak and rating jump show strong progress. Keep small, focused routines (tactics, opening checks, post‑game reviews) and you’ll turn practical strength into a stable rating increase. If you want, send two recent losses and I’ll annotate the critical moments move‑by‑move.
Opponents you recently beat: hugov94, dillu023.