Profile Summary: Gana1364
Meet Gana1364, a rapid chess aficionado whose journey through the 64 squares is anything but ordinary. With a peak rapid rating soaring up to 1164 in late 2024, Gana is the kind of player who proves that persistence (and maybe a touch of stubbornness) really do pay off. Over thousands of games, the balance between wins and losses hovers pretty evenly—4032 wins to 4053 losses with 305 draws—showcasing both fierce fights and thrilling battles on the board.
Though blitz and daily ratings are more modest (max blitz rating at 843 and a daily peak of 1200), Gana’s games in rapid time controls have volume and variety. Their preferred battlefield? The "Unknown Opening," which might be code for “I’m making it up as I go along” or “My secret weapon.” On the bright side, the Italian Game shines with over 60% win rate—perhaps proof that classical lines are their bread and butter.
A tactical player with a 78.1% comeback rate, Gana is never one to quit early—except, apparently, when resigning (which happens about 1.75% of the time early). Speaking of resilience, the longest winning and losing streaks both stand at 11 games, suggesting a rollercoaster personality: sometimes a chess hero, sometimes a bewildered pawn.
Fun fact: Gana1364 performs best at 12:00 PM, so if you want to catch their sharpest moves (or exploit their rare weaknesses), set your watch accordingly. With an astute average of 59 moves per win, games are less a quick checkmate and more a satisfying intellectual marathon.
Recent games demonstrate their skill and variety: a victorious battle in the Philidor Defense that ended with a respectful resignation by the opponent, and a victorious duel in the Italian Game, decided after a well-played endgame. But beware—Gana is not invincible; losses happen, sometimes by a swift checkmate, reminding us that even the best have off days.
When not battling grandmasters or local legends, Gana1364 might just surprise you with their everyday charm and undeniable love for chess—a player who keeps coming back to the board, game after game, win or lose, because that's what true chess passion looks like.