Avatar of Mark Plotkin

Mark Plotkin IM

littleplotkin Canada Since 2011 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
49.0%- 42.3%- 8.7%
Bullet 3154
1799W 1360L 209D
Blitz 3007
5535W 4967L 1090D
Rapid 2407
22W 12L 7D
Daily 1998
9W 7L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Feedback on your recent bullet games

Nice work staying active and sharp in fast time controls. In bullet, quick, practical decisions often matter more than deep calculations, and you seem comfortable with fast tactics and piece activity. Below are actionable ideas to build on your strengths and address a few recurring patterns.

What you did well

  • You keep the pressure high and look for forcing moves. When you find tactical chances, you convert them efficiently, which is key in bullet games.
  • You practice flexible piece development, especially in openings that resemble a fianchetto or solid, queen-side setups. This helps you control important diagonals and central squares under time pressure.
  • You demonstrate resilience in complicated positions, often finding chances to complicate and turn the tables even when the position is not straightforward.

Areas to improve (with concrete steps)

  • Time management under pressure: bullet games can tighten quickly. Practice with a 1-minute or 3-minute training set, and develop a quick, safe default plan for each phase (early development, middlegame tension, endgame simplification) so you can move confidently when seconds are ticking.
  • Be cautious with exchanges and simplifications when you’re ahead or when material balance is unclear. Before committing to trades, ask: does this simplify in my favor or give my opponent counterplay? If not, look for retaining tension and active piece play.
  • Endgame technique: many bullet games hinge on converting small material or positional edges. Strengthen basic rook endings, king activity, and pawn endgames with short, focused practice sessions (e.g., 15 minutes of rook ending drills, 10 minutes of king-w2p endgames).
  • Post-game review habit: after each session, spend 5–10 minutes identifying one Thiess-like moment (a critical turn or a missed tactic) and write down a takeaway. This reinforces learning from fast games.

Opening and plan adjustments

Your openings show comfort with flexible, positionally solid setups that lead to tangible middle-game plans. To keep momentum and reduce risk in bullet, consider:

  • Locking in a small set of go-to lines for the most common defenses you face, so you can reach a familiar type of position quickly.
  • For the fianchetto-style setups, practice a couple of simple middlegame ideas (such as timely pawn pushes or knight maneuvers to central squares) to avoid getting bogged down in overly passive lines.
  • Develop a quick checklist for the first 8–12 moves in your chosen openings, focusing on piece development, king safety, and central control. This helps you avoid early material swings and keeps the game on your terms.

Practice plan for the next sessions

  • Daily tactical drills: 15–20 minutes focusing on forks, pins, skewers, and forcing sequences that appear in bullet games.
  • Opening reinforcement: pick 2–3 familiar openings and study 2 offshoots or common replies for each to improve versatility while keeping plans simple.
  • Endgame blitz: 10–15 minutes per week on rook endings and king-and-pawn endgames with practical aims (protect a pawn, create a passer, activate the king).
  • Game review routine: after every session, review a win and a loss with a brief note on one switch in plan that would have changed the result, plus one practical improvement for the next game.

Optional reference highlights

If you’d like to save a quick reference to a recent game that stood out, we can embed a lightweight summary or a short PGN highlight for easy review later. For example, a compact summary of a strong tactical sequence or a clean endgame conversion can be saved as a quick reminder.


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