Guilherme Cunha Claudino (Username: GuillermeB)
Meet Guilherme Cunha Claudino, a rapid chess enthusiast whose moves are almost as dynamic as a mitochondrion powering a cell! With a peak rapid rating of 661 in 2025 and a solid 601 most recently, Guilherme’s game exhibits the agility of an enzyme catalyzing victory.
Across 378 rapid games, Guilherme has secured 190 wins, proving that this player knows how to make pawns become queens by mitosis of brilliant strategy. However, with 177 losses and 11 draws, the road isn’t always smooth — but then again, even proteins sometimes misfold!
Opening Repertoire
-
Scotch Game: Guilherme’s top-performing opening, boasting a 60.6% win rate over 33 games. It’s like the DNA sequence that’s well-conserved for successful replication.
-
Scandinavian Defense: A sturdy option with a 52.4% win rate, acting like a cell membrane defending against invaders.
-
Queen’s Pawn Openings and Alekhine’s Defense: These provide moderate success, stimulating the neural pathways for creative play.
Playing Style & Personality
Guilherme tends to fight through over 48 moves on average in wins, showing stamina reminiscent of a marathon-running mitochondrion powering through endgames — which occur in 41.5% of his matches. With a comeback rate nearing 59% and a 100% win rate after losing a piece, he’s clearly adept at cellular repair tactics, bouncing back like a resilient stem cell.
Not one to prematurely “resign the cell,” his early resignation rate stays low at just over 5%. Guilherme’s psychological tilt factor is modest at 7, meaning he keeps his cool under pressure — no apoptosis here.
Fun Facts
- Best day to challenge Guilherme? Monday, where his win rate peaks at 56.9%—Monday motivation definitely in his genetic code.
- His prime tactical hours? 11 AM shows a flawless 100% win ratio, proving his chess neurons are firing at peak efficiency.
- Longest winning streak? An impressive 11-game chain — talk about a strong replication cycle!
Whether it's Scandinavian defense or a swift Scotch Game, Guilherme approaches the chessboard much like a biologist approaches a microscope: with patience, strategy, and the thrill of discovery. One might say Guilherme is truly the “cell-f” of his own chess universe.