Chess Player Profile: ganiuqk
Meet ganiuqk, the chess enthusiast whose rating graph looks a bit like a roller coaster (with more loop-de-loops). Jumping into the scene with a Rapid rating peaking at 467 in 2024, and keeping a steady hustle with an average around 379, this player’s games never fail to entertain. Although not exactly storming the grandmaster circuit just yet, ganiuqk boasts an impressive comeback rate of 43.65%, proving they're never out until the final move—and apparently, they pull off 100% win rate after losing a piece. Talk about resilience!
Rapids and blitzes are their playgrounds, but watch out—been known to resign early about 10% of the time, probably to conserve mental energy or maybe to perfect the art of dramatic exits. With an average moves per win hovering around 42, they enjoy a nice long cerebral bout before claiming victory. Just beware the occasional lengthy loss dreadfully stretching past 50 moves.
Playing Style & Personality
- Opening preferences: A fan of the Queens Pawn Opening Horwitz Defense (with nearly 70% win rate!) and the mysterious “Top Secret” opening, which—despite its cheeky name—is all serious business on the board.
- Psychological quirks: Locked in a mild tilt factor of 10 and a slight preference for rated games where their winning chances seem nearly 10% better than casual. Apparently, the pressure makes them sharper.
- Time of day: If you want to catch them at their peak, target evenings around 7-9 pm—they win over half their games at that time.
Fun Facts
- Has faced 'gjujtsiaa' nearly 100 times—talk about a rivalry! Unfortunately, the win rate there is a modest 16.7%; hang in there, ganiuqk!
- Daily games can be tough—only 2 wins against 14 losses—but blitz and rapid wins stack up better with 494 and 8 total wins respectively.
- Current winning streak? Not happening right now. Longest streak? Twelve glorious wins in a row. Go big or go home!
To sum it up: ganiuqk might not be breaking records yet, but with a blend of persistence, quirky openings, and a spirit that never says die—even when losing a piece—they’re exactly the kind of player who keeps the game of chess endlessly fascinating.