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Mister T

Username: MisterT14000

Playing Since: 2021-06-08 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Daily: 726
23W / 33L / 4D
Rapid: 815
70W / 62L / 8D
Blitz: 772
400W / 380L / 44D
Bullet: 948
724W / 652L / 29D

Profile Summary: Mister T (MisterT14000)

Meet Mister T, a chess player whose rating has evolved like a magnificent evolutionary branch on the phylogenetic tree of chess mastery. From modest beginnings in 2021 with a Rapid rating hovering around 608 and Blitz at 422, Mister T’s stratagem polymerase has been hard at work, synthesizing higher levels of play across all time controls.

Evolutionary Timeline

  • Rapid: A climb from an average of ~624 in 2021 to a robust ~675 by 2025, proving that persistence and adaptation keep the genome of strategy ever improving.
  • Blitz: From a low-flux ~400 rating in 2021 to a peak of 841 in 2025, showing a rapid proliferation of tactical genes that thrive under pressure.
  • Bullet: The fastest metabolism of all – bursting from a single recorded game at 354 in 2022 to a spiky apex of 776 in 2023, then maintaining a respectable 604 average in 2025.
  • Daily: Slow and steady, like a good cell cycle, with ratings stabilizing near 700s and average games hinting at solid endgame stamina.

Chess Openings - Genetic Markers of Style

Mister T’s DNA encodes for an interesting preference in openings, with considerable success in Scandinavian Defense and Queens Pawn Opening variations. Notably, the Queens Pawn Opening Zukertort Chigorin Variation boasts a perfect 100% win rate in Rapid games – an evolutionary niche that few players dare to enter. On Blitz and Bullet DNA strands, the Scandinavian Defense holds dominance, reflecting adaptability and aggression.

Performance & Tactical Adaptations

With a comeback rate of 66.12%, Mister T thrives when the organism is under stress – analogous to a cell repairing damage and coming back stronger. Even more impressively, the player exhibits a 100% win rate after losing a piece, signaling high tactical resilience and a never-say-die biochemical attitude.

Psychological & Behavioral Traits

Mister T has a tilt factor of 8, showing that while frustration may occasionally sprawl like a viral infection, it remains controlled. Notably, the player wins 13.52% more in rated games compared to casual, revealing a predatory adaptation to competitive environments.

Match Records & Opponent Ecology

Having faced frequent opponents like sheepman314 and morsvelociter1, Mister T’s interaction network is wide and genetically diverse. Win rates against various opponents range from perfect 100% scores to some tricky zeros, resembling a natural selection process where only the fittest survive in each local environment.

Playing Style and Game Dynamics

An average of ~52 moves per win in combination with an increasingly frequent endgame phase (54.2%) suggest that Mister T enjoys long, grinding battles – much like an organism carefully navigating its ecosystem to survive. Early resignation rates (2.05%) are low, confirming a hardy genetic disposition reluctant to surrender prematurely.

In Summary

From opening gambits to endgame persistence, Mister T is a study in evolutionary chess biology: adapting, recovering, and thriving in diverse time controls. Whether speeding through bullet like a metabolic burst or slowly evolving in daily games, this player’s genome is well-packed with tactics, stamina, and a few clever mutations that keep opponents guessing in the ongoing dance of kings and pawns.


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice session — your rating trend is moving up (recent +12 in 1 month, +79 in 3 months, +271 in 6 months) and your strength‑adjusted win rate is ~53%. You’re winning by active tactics and forcing sequences, but a few recurring issues cost you games: king safety, created passed pawns from the opponent, and occasional tunnel vision under time pressure.

What you’re doing well

  • Heads‑up tactics: you find forks and discovered checks quickly (see the combination that drove the Black king into a mating net vs gmkonadu).
  • Active rooks and piece coordination: in several wins you used doubled rooks / rook lifts to force simplification and decisive material gain.
  • Opening comfort: you repeatedly reach positions from the London/Queen’s‑pawn type systems and handle them confidently — that consistency helps you save time in bullet.
  • Conversion: when you get a material or positional edge you usually convert (many wins end with clean mates or decisive material advantage).
  • Momentum: your longer trends show real improvement — maintain the practice rhythm that produced +271 over 6 months.

Main weaknesses to fix

  • King safety in middlegame/endgame — a few losses were direct mating nets (e.g., the game with arpitsharma1810 ended with Qxg4# after a passed pawn ran to promotion). Watch for opponent queen checks and back‑rank threats.
  • Allowing passed pawns to roll — in losing games you let a pawn advance to promotion squares. Identify when you must stop a passer immediately (block, trade, or attack its base).
  • Time management / flagging habits — some wins were on opponent time and some losses ended quickly. In 60s/1 increment games keep simpler plans in worse time scrambles; avoid long think on quiet moves.
  • Tunnel vision on tactics — you’re good at tactics but sometimes you chase one idea and miss a defensive resource or counter‑tactic from the opponent (double‑check, queen forks, discovered checks).

Concrete, short drills (daily / weekly)

  • 10 tactical puzzles daily (forks, pins, discovered attacks). Time yourself: 1–2 minutes per puzzle to sharpen bullet pattern recognition.
  • 5 endgame drills per week: basic king + pawn vs king, rook endgames, and simple promotion races — practice defending against a passed pawn and stopping promotion.
  • 10 minutes of opening review: pick your main London/Queen’s‑pawn lines and one Scandinavian line. Learn 3 typical plans and 1 trap to avoid per line.
  • Play focused 5‑10 bullet games where the goal is “no blunders” rather than max wins — prioritize calm moves under time pressure.

Practical tips for your next sessions

  • Before you move in a hurry, run a 3‑second checklist: Is my king safe? Am I hanging any pieces? Does opponent have a tactical check? This reduces blunders dramatically in bullet.
  • When ahead, simplify: swap pieces (not pawns) to reduce counterplay and avoid being tricked into a mate net.
  • If opponent has a passed pawn march, look to either attack its base, block with a piece, or exchange into a simpler winning endgame. Don’t let it queen for free.
  • Use premoves sparingly — premove when you’re sure (captures that recapture are safe), but avoid autopremove in sharp positions with checks and promotions nearby.

Opening notes & focus

  • You play many Scandinavian and London System types — both give you decent win rates. Keep the Scandinavian defense work since your overall performance there is strong (use your familiarity to gain time in bullet).
  • If you enjoy tactical, gambit lines (Elephant Gambit shows a high win rate for you), keep a couple of tested gambit lines to surprise opponents — but study the common refutations so you don’t get mated by quick counters.
  • Study one short plan per opening (where to put knights, where to break pawns) rather than memorizing long move lists — that helps in 60s games.

Annotated key sequence (learn from it)

Nice final combination vs gmkonadu — the forcing line that finished the game:

  • Key sequence (simplified): advancing knight to fork opportunities, doubling rooks on the d/file, exchanging to reach a position where the enemy king is exposed, then final queen checkmate.

Short plan for the next 2 weeks

  • Week 1: Daily tactics (10 puzzles), 3 mini endgame tasks, review 1 opening plan (10 minutes/day).
  • Week 2: 20 focused bullet games with the “no blunder” target, keep a short notebook of 3 blunders per day to correct patterns.
  • Goal: keep the +12 one‑month slope going — aim for consistent 5–10 point gains weekly by reducing losses to simple tactical oversights.

Opponents referenced

  • Recent wins vs gmkonadu and armindurakovic.
  • Recent loss vs arpitsharma1810 — study the game to see how a passed pawn plus queen checks led to mate.
  • Also: marc9999888 and setrarav appeared in the session.

Closing — keep building

Your rating trend and win rate show you’re improving. Keep sharpening fast tactical recognition, tighten king safety, and practice simple endgames and timing. If you want, send 3 specific games you felt confused about and I’ll give move‑by‑move, short corrections.



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
gmkonadu 1W / 0L / 0D View
armindurakovic 1W / 0L / 0D View
setrarav 1W / 0L / 0D View
marc9999888 1W / 0L / 0D View
arpitsharma1810 0W / 1L / 0D View
fede_argen 0W / 1L / 0D View
dadusssss 1W / 0L / 0D View
oskar121201 0W / 1L / 0D View
m_one3_m 1W / 0L / 0D View
0leksan1r 0W / 1L / 0D View
Most Played Opponents
SheepMan314 24W / 48L / 4D View Games
aymannlegoat 13W / 43L / 5D View Games
Odalrik Derville 27W / 22L / 5D View Games
gabbbzzr7 27W / 4L / 0D View Games
echecman01 7W / 13L / 1D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 948 772 815
2024 682 649 657 726
2023 754 656 703 709
2022 354 394
2021 422 608
Rating by Year20212022202320242025948354YearRatingBulletBlitzRapidDaily

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 265W / 214L / 25D 247W / 237L / 18D 64.8
2024 85W / 92L / 7D 81W / 95L / 7D 61.3
2023 270W / 233L / 19D 259W / 253L / 11D 53.5
2022 5W / 9L / 1D 7W / 6L / 0D 51.0
2021 9W / 12L / 3D 12W / 12L / 0D 63.6

Openings: Most Played

Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Scandinavian Defense 317 167 148 2 52.7%
Amazon Attack 188 90 91 7 47.9%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 174 84 84 6 48.3%
Australian Defense 153 77 72 4 50.3%
Amar Gambit 67 30 35 2 44.8%
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 45 26 19 0 57.8%
Vienna Gambit, with Max Lange Defense 44 21 22 1 47.7%
Barnes Defense 41 13 26 2 31.7%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 32 19 13 0 59.4%
Elephant Gambit 25 19 6 0 76.0%
Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Scandinavian Defense 191 89 94 8 46.6%
Amazon Attack 110 61 44 5 55.5%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 93 38 50 5 40.9%
Australian Defense 80 37 41 2 46.2%
Amar Gambit 55 28 23 4 50.9%
Barnes Defense 39 17 18 4 43.6%
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 34 11 22 1 32.4%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 16 12 3 1 75.0%
French Defense 16 8 8 0 50.0%
Vienna Gambit, with Max Lange Defense 14 8 4 2 57.1%
Rapid Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Amazon Attack 27 11 15 1 40.7%
Scandinavian Defense 25 13 12 0 52.0%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 16 10 4 2 62.5%
Australian Defense 13 7 5 1 53.9%
Amar Gambit 13 5 6 2 38.5%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 7 3 3 1 42.9%
Barnes Defense 5 2 2 1 40.0%
Czech Defense 5 1 2 2 20.0%
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 4 3 1 0 75.0%
QGA: 3.e3 c5 4 2 2 0 50.0%
Daily Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Amazon Attack 17 6 9 2 35.3%
Scandinavian Defense 10 4 6 0 40.0%
Australian Defense 6 2 3 1 33.3%
Barnes Defense 5 2 3 0 40.0%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 4 1 3 0 25.0%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 2 0 2 0 0.0%
QGD: 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.e3 2 1 1 0 50.0%
Amar Gambit 2 0 1 1 0.0%
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 2 1 1 0 50.0%
Bishop's Opening: Horwitz Gambit 2 1 1 0 50.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 11 4
Losing 8 0
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