Quick summary for Panji Harapan
Overall you show strong attacking instincts and an ability to finish games when the opponent's king is exposed. Your opening repertoire has clear winners (notably the Caro-Kann Defense and some King’s Gambit/King's Pawn lines) but a few high-variance lines are costing you consistency. Recent rating movement shows a small dip (-30 last month) after a long period of growth — that usually means the skills are there, you just need to tighten up a couple of habits.
What you're doing well
- Finishing attacks: you convert tactical chances decisively (example win with a final queen infiltration and mate: see the game viewer below).
- Opening choices that suit your style: you perform very well with the Caro-Kann Defense (high win rate) and aggressive King-side approaches.
- Tactical alertness — you spot forks, pins and mating nets quickly in the middlegame.
- Volume play and experience — your overall record (many games) gives you practical edge versus less active opponents.
Example game (recent win):
Key areas to improve
- Material-grabbing vs. king safety: you sometimes take a pawn/rook on the side while the opponent gets huge tempo or attacks the king. Before snatching material answer: “Will my king be safe and are my pieces active afterwards?”
- Consistency in risky openings: lines like the Blackburne Shilling Gambit, Batavo Gambit and some sharp offbeat setups show lower win rates for you — they give spectacular wins but also losses. If you like traps, study the refutations and the most common defensive replies so you don’t fall behind when the opponent avoids the bait.
- Time management in rapid: avoid big dips on the clock. In 12+0 rapid, try to keep 10–15 seconds per move in the opening and early middlegame so you have time to calculate in critical positions.
- Post-blunder recovery: when you fall behind, spend a moment to find the most practical counterplay rather than rushing; look for active piece squares and pawn breaks.
Concrete 4-week plan
- Daily (15–30 min): tactics — use mixed-tactic sets and focus on calculation depth (visualize 3–4 moves deep). Aim for 20–30 good puzzles, not just speed.
- 3×/week (30–45 min): analyze 2 of your recent losses. Do a self-review first (no engine) and write down the 3 critical moments per game, then check with an engine.
- Weekly (60–90 min): opening housekeeping — keep the Caro-Kann Defense as a core. For your low-win lines (Blackburne Shilling, Batavo Gambit), either prune them or study 8–10 model games and the standard refutations so you don’t get surprised.
- Endgame practice (2×/week, 20 min): basic king and pawn endings, rook vs rook, and simple technique — this increases conversion rate when you reach the endgame with an advantage.
- One longer game per week (30+ min per side or 15|10 rapid): practice deeper calculation and time management under pressure.
Opening advice (practical)
- Double down on what works: keep the Caro-Kann Defense and the King-side attacking motifs you already convert well.
- Neutralize risky lines: for openings where your WinRate <45%, either remove them from your regular repertoire or learn the main defensive plans so you don't rely on traps.
- Memorize plans, not moves: for each opening you play, write a one-paragraph plan for both sides — typical pawn breaks, good piece posts, and when to castle.
Typical mistakes & short checks to run during games
- Before capturing a “free” piece: check for opponent’s tactical shot (pin, fork, discovered attack) and whether your king will be unsafe afterwards.
- After your opponent makes a surprising move: ask “What threat did they create?” before replying.
- If you have extra material but the opponent has active pieces: force simplification (trade a pair of pieces) or build a plan to blockade / neutralize their activity.
Mindset & post-game routine
- Write down the single reason you lost/won immediately after the game (tactical miss, time trouble, bad opening prep, etc.).
- Limit engine use: try 10–15 minutes of human review before checking the engine — that trains your pattern recognition.
- Celebrate small wins: converting a won position, avoiding time trouble, or improving your opening play are all progress.
Small checklist for your next rapid session
- Warm up: 10 tactics (mixed) before the session.
- Play 3 rapid games (12|0) with focus: one long think, one normal, one fast — practice different tempos.
- After each game: note 3 moments (what went well, what to improve, the turning point).
- Weekly review: 5 losses + 5 wins annotated by you, then checked with engine.
Useful links / studies
- Study the typical middlegame plans for the Scandinavian Defense and Caro-Kann Defense — you already have success there; deepen the plans.
- If you keep using gambits or traps (Blackburne Shilling, Batavo), study standard refutations so you don’t get into worse positions when the opponent refuses the bait.
Closing — keep building
Your long-term curve shows you can climb; the recent -30 is small and reversible. Focus on fixing the grabbing-king-safety balance, limit high-variance openings unless prepared, and put in a small, consistent training routine. If you want, send me 2 specific loss games and I’ll annotate the three turning points and give exact improvements.
Opponent profile reference (if you want to review a specific opponent): %3Ckoznikmody%3E