Avatar of Abdellatif Boukhari

Abdellatif Boukhari

G0ne12 Since 2024 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟
51.4%- 41.5%- 7.1%
Bullet 167
0W 2L 0D
Blitz 365
13W 17L 0D
Rapid 1034
491W 388L 70D
Daily 400
1W 1L 0D

Abdellatif Boukhari: The Chessboard Biologist

Meet Abdellatif Boukhari, or as the chess petri dish often calls him, G0ne12 — a player whose moves remind us that strategy, like evolution, adapts and thrives under pressure. With a Rapid rating blossoming to a peak of 506 and a Blitz max of 622, Abdellatif’s growth curve proves he’s no mere lab experiment but an evolving organism on the chess battlefield.

Abdellatif’s playing style is a fascinating study in balance: an early resignation rate of just under 16%, coupled with a nearly 50% endgame frequency, shows he knows when to conserve cellular energy and when to engage in the high-stakes mitosis of the endgame. His average moves per win hover around 54 – a marathon of careful replication rather than rapid mutation.

His defensive DNA is strong, with a remarkable 100% win rate after losing a piece, proving that even when subjected to environmental stress (like losing material), Abdellatif’s tactical genome expresses supreme resilience.

Opening-wise, Abdellatif loves to branch out from the King's Pawn Opening (King’s Knight Variation), winning over half his rapid games (54%). He also chemically bonds well with the Philidor Defense, boasting an impressive 83% win rate that would make any enzyme proud.

Not just a lab rat running patterns, Abdellatif’s strategic petri dish is teeming with quirky statistics: his longest winning streak stretches a hearty 7 games, while his win rate peaks on Saturdays at nearly 69%, suggesting perhaps a circadian rhythm finely tuned for weekend collisions.

Beware opponents like “ttutdgh” or “fababoule” — Abdellatif’s success rate against these challengers is a perfect 100%, demonstrating selective pressure where only the fittest moves survive.

Whether in Rapid, Blitz, Bullet, or Daily incubators, Abdellatif Boukhari remains a fascinating specimen, proving that chess, much like biology, is about adaptation, strategy, and occasionally throwing your opponent into a genetic bottleneck.

🐞 Report a Problem