Quick summary for Darko Parezanin
Good momentum: your strength‑adjusted win rate (~0.63) and recent +20 rating change show you're improving. You handle the King's Indian structures confidently and you convert practical chances under pressure — but time management (flagging) and occasional tactical oversights are costing you in bullet.
Games & links (quick access)
Review these to replay critical moments:
- Recent win vs brags13 — solid conversion in a King’s Indian type position. View replay:
- Recent loss vs zaffrona — you had active pieces but lost on time; good tactical shot earlier (Nxe4) worth studying.
What you're doing well
Clear strengths to keep building on:
- Opening selection: you play the King’s Indian family a lot and it suits you — 60% win rate there. Keep using those lines where you understand the typical pawn breaks and piece plans. (King's Indian Defense)
- Tactical sharpness: you find decisive tactics in the middlegame (captures like Nxe4 and Rxf8+ appear in your recent games).
- Practical conversion: when you get a passed pawn or active rooks you tend to press — that practical sense is valuable in bullet.
- Positive trend: rating slope and recent +20 show consistent improvement — keep it steady.
Main weaknesses to fix (priority)
Fixing these will give the biggest immediate improvement in bullet:
- Time management / flagging — several games ended by clock. In bullet the clock is as important as the position. Avoid getting into positions that require long calculation when your clock is low.
- Premove discipline — don’t premove into unknown captures or checks. Only premove when the resulting square is forced or safe.
- Tactical cleanups — you make strong tactical shots but sometimes miss follow‑ups or leave pieces vulnerable. Slow an extra half‑second on critical captures to scan for opponent counters.
- Transition technique — converting small advantages (minor piece vs pawns, advanced passer) under extreme time pressure needs simplified plans: trade queens when winning on the clock, centralize king when endgame approaches.
Concrete drills & practice plan (next 7–14 days)
Small focused routines you can do before warmup or between sessions:
- 10 minutes: high‑tempo tactics (2–3 minute puzzles, focus on forks, pins, discovered attacks). Aim for accuracy over speed.
- 5 bullet games with 1+1 increment — practice maintaining a 10–20s buffer on the clock. After each game note one time‑management mistake.
- Endgame micro‑drills: 10 positions of king + pawn vs king, and simple rook endings. Know the key ideas (opposition, cutoffs, Lucena basics).
- Premove rule: for one session, forbid premoves entirely. See how many extra seconds you buy for tactical checks.
- Opening review: once per week, review one typical KID plan (pawn break e5/ c5, knight outpost on e4/d5) — 15 minutes.
Specific suggestions from the recent games
Two quick, actionable notes based on those PGNs:
- Win vs brags13 — you won by pressing the queenside and advancing a passed pawn. When you trade into an endgame with a passed pawn, prioritize king activity and piece trades that make the pawn unstoppable.
- Loss vs Zaffrona — you reached a sharp position and then the game ended on the clock. If you have a tactical shot (like Nxe4), calculate a quick cheap verification: what is the opponent’s immediate reply? If unclear, choose a simpler consolidating move instead.
Opening advice
You already do well in the King’s Indian and several Sicilian lines. Small improvements:
- Study typical pawn breaks and one clear plan per side (for example: when to play c5 vs when to play f5/e5 as Black).
- Keep a short repertoire of 3–4 move orders you know by heart so your opening clock cost is minimal in bullet.
- Use the openings with the highest win rates for you (KID & Cobra Variation lines) when you want to maximize score.
Checklist for your next bullet session
- Warm up: 5 minutes tactics + 2 games 2+1 (not full bullet) to get the fingers and brain synced.
- During a serious bullet run: keep at least 8–12 seconds in reserve; avoid complex long calculations below 6 seconds.
- After each loss: quickly replay last 3 moves and mark whether the loss was positional/tactical/time — learn the pattern.
Motivation & next milestone
Your trend shows a fast upward slope — treat the next goal as +50 rating or reaching consistent 1‑minute parity where you don’t lose on time. Small habits (premove discipline, a 10‑minute tactic warmup, and one opening plan review weekly) will get you there.