Avatar of Githinji_pn

Githinji_pn

Playing Since: 2024-08-07 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Daily: 400
6W / 6L / 0D
Rapid: 397
49W / 54L / 3D
Blitz: 265
1085W / 1229L / 13D
Bullet: 299
127W / 171L / 1D

Profile Summary: Githinji_pn

Meet Githinji_pn, a chess enthusiast whose journey in the world of checkered battles is nothing short of an epic saga filled with ups, downs, and plenty of “Oops, blundered again!” moments. With a blitz rating peaking modestly at 232 in 2025 and a bullet max rating of 465 in 2024, Githinji_pn’s style is a cocktail of bold gambits and brave (sometimes risky) defenses that make every game a thrilling rollercoaster.

Known for a somewhat stubborn early resignation rate hovering near 29%, Githinji_pn isn't afraid to admit defeat early—because why drag a hopeless game when you can start fresh and plot a cunning comeback? And oh, the comebacks! Sporting a 22.57% comeback rate with a perfect 100% win rate even after losing a piece, this player knows how to turn the tables and keep opponents on their toes.

Opening lines are a fun playground for Githinji_pn, with a fondness for the King’s Pawn Opening in blitz, delivering victories in over half the games played (~52%). The Alekhine’s Defense also brings a smile with a respectable 53.57% win rate—because sometimes instigating chaos early can be a winning strategy. In bullet games, the Sicilian Defense Bowdler Attack boasts a flawless 100% win rate, proving Githinji_pn can unleash surprise punches when the seconds tick away.

Time-wise, Saturday and Friday afternoons see the best victories, with the player nailing a >46% win rate, and even managing a mysterious 100% win rate at the 0 and 3 o’clock hours. Night owl or early bird? Githinji_pn apparently conquers all hours of the day!

When wearing the white pieces, expect a slightly better outcome (~46.4% wins) compared to playing black (~37.35%), but either way, the fight is fierce. Games usually last around 27 moves on wins and 25 moves when the pawns tumble to defeat—suggesting a patient but sometimes impulsive approach.

Despite an impressive collection of wins, the loss counts are humbling, with more game losses than wins in blitz and bullet formats—a true testament to the motto: “Fall down seven times, get up eight.”

Off the board (or rather, off the clock), Githinji_pn is full of surprises, with friendly rivalries against opponents such as jvstincognito (currently a tough nut), and shining victories against others like lucky444you. The psychological tilt factor is modest at 13, showing a cool head under pressure, albeit sometimes taxed by repeating blunders.

In short, Githinji_pn is a chess adventurer with a scrappy heart, a mischievous opening repertoire, and an undying spirit to fight back from the brink—because, in chess as in life, it’s all about the next move.


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice upward momentum — your rating trend and recent month gains show clear improvement. You like sharp, unbalanced positions and aren’t afraid to bring the queen out early or grab material. That aggression wins you quick games, but it also creates tactical risks. Below are concrete things you’re doing well and focused steps to tighten weaknesses.

What you’re doing well

  • Good results from aggressive play — your recent wins (example vs drewpodo09 and yang1710) show you punish opponents who blunder in the opening and middlegame.
  • Confidence with tactical shots: you convert mating nets and queen checks quickly (see the tactical finish in one recent win).
  • Upward rating momentum — +44 in the last month and large gains over 6 months shows learning and adaptation.
  • Willingness to simplify into winning endgames or force decisive tactical lines — you trade when it helps your plan rather than just for material.

Recurring issues to fix

  • Early queen deployment (1...Qf6 pattern): it can work as a surprise but often invites tempo-gaining attacks and tactical shots — you lose time and sometimes allow the opponent to open lines. Be cautious about bringing the queen out before finishing development.
  • Material grabs in the corner (knight takes rook on a1): grabbing the rook can leave you stranded or lose initiative. Check if your king and pieces are safe after the capture — if your queen/rooks are cut off, it’s often a net loss in practical play.
  • Back-rank and king safety: several losses came after your king stayed in the center or you left back-rank weaknesses. Opponents exploited checks and infiltration (Qh2+, Qg2 patterns).
  • Occasional tactical oversights: you win tactical games but also fall to forks and discovered attacks. Double-check opponent checks and intermezzos before taking material.
  • Converting small advantages: sometimes you win material but the position becomes messy and you don’t convert cleanly — plan simplification or a clear method to trade down into a won endgame.

Concrete, short-term drills (daily/weekly)

  • Solve 10–20 tactical puzzles daily focusing on forks, pins, discovered attacks and back-rank motifs. Emphasize “reverse” training — look at positions where you almost blundered and identify the missed tactic.
  • Play 10 blitz games where you ban bringing the queen out before move 6 unless it’s a proven opening line — force developing moves (Nc6/Nf6, d6, Be7, O-O).
  • Practice 5 “king safety” checklists: before every capture with material gain ask — is my king exposed? Any checks or forks? Can my opponent open files or diagonals?
  • Review 2 lost games per week with engine and persona-first analysis: write down the moment you felt uncomfortable and the concrete alternative move(s).

Opening advice

You favor sharp, offbeat lines (your openings stats show a lot of aggressive choices). That’s a strength — but refine the repertoire:

  • If you want to keep the early Qf6 idea, study the transpositions and typical defensive moves opponents use so you know which tracks are safe and which are traps. Tag this line and review 10 model games.
  • Alternatively, switch to solid developing ideas as a baseline: prioritize Nf6/Nc6, d6 (or d5) and quick castling. That reduces tactical losses and keeps your initiative when you want it.
  • Pick two main responses for the most common white replies and learn 4–6 typical middlegame plans for each — depth > breadth in blitz pays off.
  • Use the opening name tag to stay organized: try noting the line you played after each game (example: King's Pawn Opening).

Examples from your recent games

  • Short tactical finish vs drewpodo09 — you forced early exchanges and the queen trade ended the game quickly. That’s a model of “use tactics to simplify and win.” See the quick sequence:
    .
  • Win vs yang1710 — you kept pressure with queen checks and rook activity then delivered a mating tactic. Positive: you found active pieces and decisive checks. Tip: try to replicate the middlegame plan consistently (activate heavy pieces on open files).
  • Loss vs daffodilperson — pattern: early queen, then enemy reached your back rank and used checks to dismantle your position. Lesson: when your queen comes out early, prioritize king safety (castling or exchanging attackers) before grabbing material.

Practical checklist to use during games

  • Before any material snatch: count opponent checks and potential forks (1 minute scan).
  • If you play an early queen: ask “can I lose a tempo to a developing move from opponent?” If yes, delay the queen or prepare escape squares.
  • Always keep one escape square for the king or create luft if you castle late.
  • In time trouble: trade queens when you’re ahead and simplify; avoid risky tactical complications unless absolutely winning.

Next steps (30 / 90 / 180 day plan)

  • 30 days — daily tactics (10–20 puzzles), 50 reviewed blitz games for concrete recurring mistakes, ban queen-before-develop rule in half your games.
  • 90 days — solidify two opening lines with model games, routine post-mortem on every loss, and start converting material advantage practice (basic endgames and technique).
  • 180 days — aim for consistent conversion and fewer tactical losses; your trends show you can progress quickly — push for steadier opening choices and deeper calculation under time pressure.

Parting note

Your pattern of aggressive, tactical play is a big asset — it’s why you have strong wins and a rising rating. The fastest way to climb further is to keep that aggression but remove the predictable tactical holes: shore up king safety, avoid premature material grabs that cost time and development, and practice the specific tactics that have been beating you. Small discipline changes (hold the queen back slightly, double-check checks/forks) will convert many of your close losses into wins.

If you want, I can produce a 2-week training schedule tailored to your daily availability and specific puzzle categories (forks, back-rank, discovered checks) — tell me how much time you can commit per day.



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
daffodilperson 0W / 1L / 0D View
melatoninka 0W / 1L / 0D View
rxchxsx 0W / 1L / 0D View
drewpodo09 1W / 0L / 0D View
yang1710 1W / 0L / 0D View
rajasekaran4 0W / 1L / 0D View
punygod777 0W / 1L / 0D View
kamal-samy 0W / 1L / 0D View
kairatuly_damir 1W / 0L / 0D View
ril_prof 1W / 0L / 0D View
Most Played Opponents
schachpa23 0W / 4L / 0D View Games
sugaswd 3W / 1L / 0D View Games
zen06730 2W / 2L / 0D View Games
anilbonds 2W / 0L / 1D View Games
kingartur29 2W / 1L / 0D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 113 274 373 400
2024 100 400
Rating by Year20242025400100YearRatingBulletDaily

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 596W / 604L / 8D 514W / 690L / 6D 27.6
2024 4W / 20L / 0D 4W / 20L / 0D 26.6

Openings: Most Played

Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 935 490 438 7 52.4%
Elephant Gambit 243 96 145 2 39.5%
Scandinavian Defense 137 50 87 0 36.5%
Amar Gambit 121 61 60 0 50.4%
Australian Defense 118 44 74 0 37.3%
Barnes Defense 86 43 42 1 50.0%
Bishop's Opening 79 38 41 0 48.1%
Amazon Attack 67 29 38 0 43.3%
French Defense 66 28 37 1 42.4%
Vienna Gambit, with Max Lange Defense 63 31 32 0 49.2%
Daily Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Australian Defense 3 0 3 0 0.0%
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 2 1 1 0 50.0%
Center Game 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Elephant Gambit 1 0 1 0 0.0%
Vienna Gambit, with Max Lange Defense 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Dresden Opening: The Goblin 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Bishop's Opening 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Barnes Defense 1 0 1 0 0.0%
Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 59 18 40 1 30.5%
Amar Gambit 13 3 10 0 23.1%
Elephant Gambit 12 2 10 0 16.7%
Barnes Defense 8 4 4 0 50.0%
Bishop's Opening 8 4 4 0 50.0%
Scandinavian Defense 6 3 3 0 50.0%
Center Game 6 1 5 0 16.7%
Sicilian Defense 6 2 4 0 33.3%
Amazon Attack 6 1 5 0 16.7%
Australian Defense 4 0 4 0 0.0%
Rapid Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 9 4 5 0 44.4%
French Defense 5 1 3 1 20.0%
Bishop's Opening 4 0 4 0 0.0%
Elephant Gambit 4 2 2 0 50.0%
Center Game 3 2 1 0 66.7%
Barnes Defense 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Caro-Kann Defense 1 0 1 0 0.0%
Australian Defense 1 0 1 0 0.0%
Nimzo-Larsen Attack 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Scandinavian Defense 1 1 0 0 100.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 8 0
Losing 13 3
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