Quick summary
Nice run recently — your rating trend is up (1m +9, 3m +26, 6m +31) and your strength‑adjusted win rate is ~53%. You convert advantages and close games well (resignations, checkmates, flag wins). Keep building on that.
- Good openings for you: Caro-Kann Defense, Benoni Defense: Benoni Gambit Accepted, Amazon Attack — your win rates there are strong.
- Typical successful patterns: active piece play, pawn breaks to open files, and quick tactical finishing.
What you’re doing well
- Finishing ability — you turn small advantages into wins (examples: resignations and clean mates in recent sessions).
- Good opening preparation in some lines — your Caro‑Kann and Benoni results show you know common plans and traps.
- Speed under pressure — you win games on the clock and use practical chances well (flagging and time pressure wins).
- Tactical awareness — you find tactical shots in chaotic positions and punish loose pieces quickly.
Example: you delivered a decisive mating net against yash142004 — review that sequence to see how you combined pressure on the back rank and piece activity.
Recurring weaknesses to fix
- King safety / back‑rank and mating threats — in a few recent losses your king got exposed and an enemy queen or bishop finished the job (make luft, avoid unnecessary king marches unless forced).
- Tactical oversights on defended squares — double‑checks, knight forks and discovered attacks caught you in some games. Slow down for one extra second on tactics in critical positions.
- Passive replies after simplification — when you trade down into unclear endgames you sometimes end up with passive pieces or no plan. Try to keep an active target or a pawn break ready.
- Time management in bullet — you sometimes spend too long in the opening or on a single tactical calculation and then get into severe time trouble.
Concrete bullet fixes (practical & fast)
- King safety checklist (apply instantly): have a flight square for the king, don’t leave back rank undefended, and avoid moving the rook that guards the back rank unless you create luft first.
- Pre‑move discipline: use pre‑moves for safe captures or obvious recaptures, but stop pre‑moving when the position is tactical. One stray pre‑move can lose the game.
- Opening pocket: keep 1–2 reliable bullet openings you know well (you already do well in Caro-Kann Defense and the Benoni — keep those). Memorize 6–10 key move orders and one simple plan for common replies.
- Blunder check routine: before you hit the clock in a critical position, scan for opponent checks, checks to discovered checks, and undefended pieces — a 1–2 second scan saves many games.
- Time budget: aim to play first 10 moves in ~10–12 seconds in bullet. If you spend >20s in move 6–10 you’ll be rushed later — fight for a steady pace.
Short training plan (30 minutes/day)
- 5–10 tactics (blitz puzzles) — focus on forks, pins, and back‑rank mates (10 min).
- 10 minutes: rapid review of 2 recent losses — find 1 decisive mistake in each and write a short corrective note.
- 10 minutes: play 3–5 rapid (5|0 or 3|0) focusing on king safety and time allocation — apply your pre‑move rules and opening pocket.
Mini goals for the next week
- Cut tactical blunders by 50%: identify the one square or piece that keeps getting attacked and patch it.
- Keep an opening cheat sheet: one line for White and one for Black (6 moves each) you can play instantly without thinking.
- Record 10 bullet games and review the worst blunder from each — focus on patterns rather than single moves.
Want me to analyze a specific game?
Tell me which game (by opponent or link) and I’ll give a short annotated post‑mortem with the one biggest improvement per game. Examples: mgnly — your odd king moves worked there, but it’s not a model to repeat; johnbob8888 shows the back‑rank theme you should patch.
Final encouragement
Your recent results and rating slope show you’re improving — keep the focused, small changes: tighter king safety, one pre‑move rule, and a daily tactical habit. Tell me which area you want a 2‑week plan for and I’ll draft it.