Player Profile: mrdotd
Meet mrdotd, a spirited Rapid chess enthusiast with a rating that seeds the battlefield at 547 in 2025. Known for a tactical awareness that would make the Queen jealous, mrdotd’s comeback rate sprouts to a flourishing 57.89%, and their win rate after losing a piece is a perfect 100% — talk about thriving despite some biological “pruning” in the game tree!
With an endgame frequency blossoming at 54.32%, mrdotd prefers to cultivate games deep into the late stages, averaging about 56 moves to harvest a win. Their resilience in the face of adversity is as sturdy as tree roots, shrugging off a tilt factor of 9 with an early resignation rate of just 8.05% — no weak stems here!
Diving into openings, this player’s strongest seeds are the Nimzowitsch Defense yielding a solid 60% win rate, and the Queens Pawn Opening blooming at 57%. The Italian Game is their little flowerpot of success with a neat 50% win rate, while the Scandinavian Defense seems to need a little more sunlight, sitting modestly at below 30% across variants.
Weekend play is a mixed garden: Fridays and early morning hours like 3 AM and 22 PM see higher win rates (above 50%), but midday and evening hours like 12 PM or 16 PM leaves moves a bit stunted with sparse success. Whether you're an early bird or a night owl, mrdotd knows when to photosynthesize those victories!
As for opponents, mrdotd has faced a diverse array of challenging varieties, managing to maintain a 100% win rate against a handful of players (some with wonderfully exotic usernames). Yet, the losses are many more than wins overall: 149 to 114, so this gamer knows the importance of evolving through loss — after all, even the toughest biological species do.
Overall, mrdotd is a resilient chess organism, growing steadily with each move, cultivating tactical brilliance and a stubborn root system that refuses to wither in the face of challenge. Whether they’re opening with a Bishop’s Opening sapling or digging deep into a fierce endgame forest, this player is a reminder that in chess, as in biology, adaptability is key.