MRyan Pratama: The Chessboard's Quiet Conqueror
Meet MRyan Pratama, also known by the enigmatic moniker kysmee, a chess player whose moves are as calculated as a cell's mitosis and whose strategies evolve like the complex dance of DNA strands. With a flair for rapid games—boasting a peak rapid rating of 606 in 2025—and a penchant for Scandinavian Defense, MRyan blends style with substance on the board.
Though sometimes tangled in a web of losses (111 in Blitz), MRyan exhibits remarkable resilience—boasting a comeback rate of over 65% and winning every game where a piece was initially lost. You might say MRyan has a knack for regenerating gamestate energy when the going gets tough, almost like a chess-playing starfish.
Opening Moves: The Genetic Makeup of a Gambit
- Scandinavian Defense reigns supreme in Blitz with a solid 53.6% win rate.
- Loves the Queen's Pawn Opening, scoring an impressive 62.5% success rate in Blitz games—MRyan’s sweet spot!
- Rapid games tell of a mighty 80% win rate with the Van t Kruijs Opening—clearly an opening that MRyan has mapped out like a genome sequencer.
The Environment of Play
MRyan’s chess ecosystem shows peak activity from Monday through Sunday, with a particularly fertile winning streak at 75% success around 5 PM, and an impressive win rate close to 83% at midnight (0 hour). The player thrives mostly when the sun is shining or the moon is full—showing that like many organisms, time of day can greatly impact performance.
Memorable Streaks & Opponents
MRyan’s longest winning streak stretches a healthy 9 games, and the current momentum is buzzing with 3 consecutive wins. Facing a host of opponents from scarjun to bamachandran, MRyan’s win rates oscillate wildly, proving that in the ecosystem of chess, every foe is a new species to outwit and outplay.
Psychological Traits & Playing Style
Like a complex neural network, MRyan occasionally experiences “tilt” at 13%, but balances that with an early resignation rate of just 9.24%, showing a commendable fighting spirit. With an average of around 54 moves per win, MRyan’s games are anything but short circuits: they are marathons of deep thought and molecular precision.
Whether on the Blitz petri dish or the Rapid test tube, MRyan Pratama’s chess skills continue to replicate and mutate, promising many more cellular, strategic evolutions on the horizon.