Avatar of Janko Radovic

Janko Radovic IM

Kornelone99 Since 2017 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
49.7%- 39.8%- 10.5%
Bullet 2533
33W 23L 2D
Blitz 2471
5818W 4661L 1239D
Rapid 2604
2W 0L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Overview of your recent bullet games

You’ve shown readiness to play sharp, tactical lines in bullet, along with moments of strong initiative. Across your recent games, you have both converted complex positions into wins and faced challenges when the position became chaotic or when time pressure increased. The key now is to balance sharpness with solid, quick decisions and to keep the clock in check so you can finish with the same clarity you start with.

What you’re doing well

  • Willingness to enter dynamic, tactical positions where you can leverage initiative and active piece play.
  • Ability to spot forcing sequences and convert tactical chances into material or positional gains in several games.
  • Solid opening readiness in several aggressive lines, showing you can create early pressure and keep opponents under heat.
  • Good resilience in complex middlegames—when you keep developing pieces and coordinate threats, you often stay ahead.

Areas to improve

  • Clock management under bullet time controls. Aim to decide on forcing lines earlier and simplify when the position becomes murky to avoid risky, long calculations with little time left.
  • Consistency in converting advantages. Work on converting minor edge into a clear plan and avoid over-optimistic or speculative tactical shots when a simple, solid plan suffices.
  • Endgame technique. Bullet games often reach simplified endings; strengthen basic rook endings, king activity, and active pawn play to convert more wins.
  • Opening discipline. Your openings show a wide range; refining to a smaller, well-understood repertoire can reduce early mistakes and help you play faster with a clear middlegame plan.

Opening performance insights

Your openings include several aggressive, tactical options (for example, Dutch/Smith-Morra style lines and various Sicilian variants). You tend to perform well when you can keep the game sharp and your pieces active. However, some lines in the dataset resulted in losses or difficult middlegames, suggesting you benefit from a focused, reliable subset of openings with clear middlegame plans rather than a wide spread of uncommon lines.

  • Recommendation: choose 2–3 openings to specialize in for bullet. Learn the typical middlegame plans, key pawn breaks, and common tactical motifs in those lines so you can play quickly and confidently.
  • Build a simple “checklist” for each opening: king safety, development, and first target in the opponent’s position. Use this to guide your first 10 moves without getting lost in theory.

Practice plan and next steps

  • Daily quick puzzles: 10–15 minutes of tactics to sharpen pattern recognition, focusing on forks, pins, skewers, and discovered attacks that often appear in bullet games.
  • Opening consolidation: pick 2 openings to master. For each, write a short, bullet-point middlegame plan and review 2 annotated games to reinforce typical ideas.
  • Endgame drill: practice common rook-and-pawn endings and basic king activity in short sessions (5–10 minutes, 2–3 times per week).
  • Post-game review: after each bullet session, spend 5–10 minutes reviewing one win and one loss to identify a single improvement and one thing you did well.

Report a Problem