Quick summary
Nice mix of fearless attacking and sharp play — you score wins by hunting f7/f2 and pushing pawns to open lines. At the same time you’re occasionally giving the opponent tactical chances or letting your king become exposed. Below I break down the most recent win and the losses, point out recurring patterns, and give a simple, mobile-friendly training plan you can use for the next week.
Highlight: recent win (clean tactical finish)
What worked
- You spotted the weak f7 square and quickly coordinated queen and pawns to finish the game — great attacking instinct and a practical willingness to go for mate.
- Your pawn storm (moving the g-pawn) successfully opened lines and distracted Black’s defenders.
- Quick piece activity early — bishops and queen aimed at the kingside rather than passivity.
Replay the final sequence (moves are shown below) so you can internalize the pattern: a queen sortie combined with a pawn push to open the g-file and deliver mate on f7.
Interactive replay:
Also check opponent profile: frnico33 and opening reference: King's Pawn Opening.
Losses — quick diagnostics
Short notes on each recent loss and the main takeaway:
- vs asterixkorten (Scotch-style): You reached an endgame where your king and pieces got separated and the opponent used active passed pawns and tactical checks to win. Main issue: insufficient king activity / awareness of opponent's passed pawn. Takeaway: activate king earlier in simplified positions and watch for forks and checks from the opponent’s queen/rooks.
- vs ballbillybiller (Caro‑Kann): You grabbed material with a knight fork (the classic knight to f7 tactic) but the opponent punished you immediately by opening lines and delivering a mating pattern (queen infiltration and mate on e3). Main issue: material grab without fully checking for enemy counterplay and incoming checks. Takeaway: before grabbing, always ask “what checks, captures, threats does my opponent have?”
- vs dustthekrust (Scotch/complicated middlegame): Long tactical sequence ended with a checkmate pattern. You sometimes leave escape squares for the opponent’s queen/rook to invade — this cost you. Takeaway: count enemy mating threats and consider prophylactic moves (air for the king, rook lifts, pieces covering key squares).
Recurring patterns — strengths to keep, weaknesses to fix
Strengths
- Strong attacking intuition — you go for direct targets (f7/f2, kingside pawn storms).
- Willing to take risks and look for mates — that wins quick games against careless opponents.
- Active use of pawns to open lines — g-pawn pushes and central breaks often create chances.
Weaknesses / habits to correct
- Tendency to grab material or go for sharp tactics without fully checking the opponent’s replies (especially checks and queen forks).
- Occasional king safety issues — either not creating luft or allowing queen/rook penetration after exchanges.
- In simplified endgames you sometimes underestimate the opponent’s passed pawns or tactical resource; count checks and king routes carefully.
- Opening repertoire is wide — consider simplifying to reduce early surprises and improve consistency.
Concrete next steps (what to practice right now)
Short drills — do these for 20–30 minutes a day:
- 10 tactical puzzles (focus: checks, forks, pins). Pause and ask “what checks does my opponent have?” before making captures.
- 5 quick endgame drills: king + pawn vs king basics and back‑rank prevention (practice creating luft and covering the back rank).
- Review one opening line you play most often (pick one from your top list). Learn the typical pawn breaks and one safe plan against the opponent’s common replies. Suggested: study basic replies to 1.e4 defenses like Scotch Game and Caro-Kann Defense so you stop falling into quick tactical traps.
- In analysis, always run a “3 question” post-mortem: 1) Where did I leave a check/threat? 2) Which pieces became inactive? 3) What single defensive move would have helped most?
Mini 7‑day plan
- Day 1: 15–20 tactics (checks & forks), study one typical mate pattern (back‑rank), replay your win and loss once each.
- Day 2: Opening focus (pick one line you use vs 1.e4) + 10 tactics.
- Day 3: Endgame basics (king activity, passed pawn play) + 10 tactics.
- Day 4: Play 3 rapid games with 15 min and review only tactical blunders afterward (look for missed checks).
- Day 5: Analyze one loss deeply: list the one moment you missed a defense and learn that defense pattern.
- Day 6: Mixed tactics + play one longer game and use the “3 question” post-mortem.
- Day 7: Consolidate: quick review of patterns learned, replay your favorite win, and set one concrete goal for next week (e.g., “don’t take a pawn if opponent has a check in the position”).
Checklist to use during games (quick and mobile friendly)
- Before any capture: look for checks and recaptures from opponent (10 seconds).
- If you move the king or castle: make sure there is at least one escape square or luft.
- When simplifying into an endgame: ask whether your king is more active and whether opponent has passed pawns.
- If you see a tactical shot that grabs material: pause and trace the opponent’s best reply for two moves.
Final encouragement
You already have the attacking intuition that wins quick games — the next step is tightening tactical discipline and king safety. Small habits (counting checks before captures, creating a tiny luft, choosing one opening to polish) will raise your rapid score quickly. If you want, I can prepare a personalized tactic set (10 problems) based on your recent mistakes and a short annotated replay of one of the loss games — tell me which loss you want annotated.