Raed El Hassanieh - The Chessboard Biologist
Raed El Hassanieh, known in the digital biosphere as Hitcher1993, is a player whose chess style evolves faster than a bacterial culture on a nutrient-rich petri dish. With a tactical awareness so sharp, it could cut through the toughest defenses like enzymes breaking down cell walls, Raed routinely adapts, showing a 78.04% comeback rate and a perfect 100% win rate after losing a piece. Talk about cellular regeneration on the board!
Rating Evolution and Molecular Mastery
Leaping from a rapid rating of 643 in 2023 to nearly 930 in 2024, Raed's skill DNA replicates with remarkable accuracy. His bullet rating oscillates around 470, while blitz reaches impressive peaks over 740, demonstrating a nimbleness comparable to a neuron firing synapses in rapid succession.
Opening Genes and Gambit Genomes
- Indian Game Knights Variation in Bullet: 62.5% wins - a robust allele in Raed's opening repertoire
- Englund Gambit in Blitz: Nearly 60% success - a crafty mutation for surprise attacks
- Bishops Opening in Rapid: Dominates with over 63% win rate - Raed's well-expressed gene of choice for strategic control
Psychological and Tactical Makeup
Raed’s style is biologically fascinating, combining patience with a strong endgame frequency of 68.31%, like a mitochondrion tirelessly powering the cell to victory. His average moves per win (~63) and loss (~66) hint at a deep, thoroughly composted strategy garden — never rushing, but always ready for the checkmate bloom.
Though Raed sometimes experiences the mild tilt factor of 9, it’s but a minor hiccup in the otherwise optimized signaling pathways of his mental game. His early resignation rate is as low as 2.41%, proving he’s more tenacious than your average tardigrade.
Opponent Ecosystem
Raed identifies patterns much like a good zoologist: he has a perfect win record against several opponents like chamaurise and huncut2022, while learning from losses to others, turning each match into evolutionary data for his next adaptation. His most frequent opponent is wkhazzaka, with 70 games, proving Raed thrives in a competitive habitat.
Fun Fact
If chess had a periodic table, Raed’s moves would be the noble gases: stable, rare, and capable of lighting up a game without causing a fuss. He's truly a living organism thriving in the ecosystem of 64 squares!