Avatar of nissou-ach

nissou-ach

Playing Since: 2014-05-12 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Daily: 1199
119W / 51L / 13D
Rapid: 2266
329W / 135L / 42D
Blitz: 2809
22901W / 22440L / 4397D
Bullet: 2736
21822W / 19600L / 2531D

Profile Summary: Mohamed Anis Achour (aka nissou-ach)

Mohamed Anis Achour, popularly known by the enigmatic username nissou-ach, is a seasoned chess wizard who dances beautifully across the 64 squares. With an exceptional peak blitz rating soaring up to a staggering 2800 as of February 10, 2025, he's clearly no mere mortal – some say his pieces have secret jet engines.

Born for blistering bullet battles as well, Mohamed's top bullet rating reached an electrifying 2803 in early 2024. When it comes to rapid and daily play, he's equally formidable, achieving posted peaks of 2309 and 1870, respectively. His style? Well, it's a fascinating blend of deep strategy and tactical fireworks, often leaving opponents tilting faster than you can say "checkmate." His average game length for wins hovers around 76 moves, a testimony to his enduring stamina and precision even in the most grueling fights.

Known for a remarkable comeback rate of 81%, Mohamed is not just someone who plays chess; he plays mind games. When losing a piece, he still wins 46% of the time — basically turning chess into a suspense thriller. Though modest to resign only about 4.39% of his games early, his opponents better brace for the long haul!

Opening Secrets Unveiled

Mohamed is a master explorer of the Indian Game, particularly favoring variations like Knights Variation and London System. His blitz performance shows a winning rate of nearly 48% with his "Top Secret" opening strategies – but shhh, it's secret for a reason!

In bullet battles, the Queens Pawn Opening Krause Variation is his playground, boasting an astonishing 90% win rate. Clearly, the king's safety and pawn structure are his best friends.

A Glimpse of His Latest Triumph

In a recent game on May 31, 2025, Mohamed played a masterclass in the Indian Game, Knights Variation, overwhelming his opponent with precision and patience. His win by resignation at a competitive 2616 rating against a strong adversary showcases both tactical and strategic might, crowned by a brilliant knight sacrifice and relentless pressure culminating in a graceful victory.

Playing Personality

If chess had a psychological profile, Mohamed's would clearly feature a tilt factor of 23, meaning he keeps calm – but when the clock strikes 12:00 (his best time to play), watch out! His win rates fluctuate a bit by hour and weekday, but skill and flair never wane. A bit of a perfectionist with a White win rate of about 52%, and yet he’s no pushover with Black either, scoring nearly 46% wins with the dark pieces.

Opponents beware: Mohamed enjoys long, strategic endgames, a domain where his precision and experience come shining through. And for those curious about the mood swings of a grandmaster-in-the-making, his longest winning streak is an astonishing 41 games, perfectly balanced by a humanly normal longest losing streak of 23 games. Talk about riding the roller coaster of chess life!

Fun Fact

With more than 24,900 wins in blitz alone, Mohamed's chessboard is practically his kingdom, and he the reigning monarch. His various usernames might try to confuse his enemies, but his moves always tell the real story: calculated, fearless, and often downright theatrical.

In the ever-evolving chaos of chess, Mohamed Anis Achour stands out as a player who mixes brilliance with a sprinkle of fun — just enough to keep the game exciting for everyone watching.


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick recap

Good session — multiple wins and a few instructive losses. Your play shows strong practical judgement in simplified positions and quick tactical finishing in bullet. There are recurring patterns (rook activity, passed pawns, mating nets) you can sharpen to push your bullet win rate higher.

What you did well

  • Converting advantages into wins: in the rook endgame vs Rochelle Wu you used active rooks and passed pawns to keep the opponent under pressure until resignation.
  • Spotting mating patterns: the game where you finished with a queen mate (Qxf5#) shows good awareness of queen + pawn/rook coordination and timely queen infiltration.
  • Practical time management: you kept the clock moving and used simplification when ahead — a strong bullet habit (forcing trades and removing counterplay).
  • Opening comfort: you repeatedly reach middlegames you know (e.g. Nimzo-Larsen Attack / London-style structures), which reduces early-game scrambling in 60s games.

Patterns to improve

  • King safety before promotions/advances — in your most recent loss vs Rochelle Wu you promoted but the opposing pieces delivered a fast mate (Ne2#). Always check for opponent checks and forks before promoting or grabbing material.
  • Tactical oversights around the king: the loss featured a decisive knight jump into f4/e2 area. In bullet, quickly check for enemy knight forks and back-rank tactics every time the king becomes exposed.
  • Endgame conversion technique: you do well, but there were a few moments where a cleaner plan (activate rook behind passed pawn, cut king off sooner) would shorten the win and reduce risk of counterplay.
  • Premature captures in some middlegames that opened lines for enemy pieces — count checks and candidate captures quickly (1–2 second checks) before committing.

Concrete next-step drills (bullet-focused)

  • 5–10 minute daily tactical warmup: patterns to focus on — knight forks, back-rank mates, discovered checks. Use short tactic sets (10 problems) with a 30s target per puzzle.
  • Rook endgame practice: drill simple positions — rook + pawn vs rook, king activity and cutting ideas. Aim to win/gain 1–2 moves on standard plans (lift, invade, cut the king).
  • Blitz-specific habit training: before promoting or grabbing material, perform a 1–second checklist — are there checks? Any enemy piece that jumps to a fork square? Any mate threats? Make it a reflex.
  • Opening pocket repertoire: reinforce typical continuations in your favorite lines (Nimzo-Larsen Attack, East Indian Defense). Memorize 2–3 typical plans instead of long move-lists for faster decision-making in 60s games.

Tactical example — study this finished game

Here’s the mating game you won as Black. Replay the final phase and watch how the queen and pawns force the decisive infiltration. Practice similar motifs until the pattern feels automatic in bullet.

Opening notes — tune plan over memorization

  • If you often play Nimzo-Larsen Attack or the East Indian Defense, focus on typical pawn breaks and where your pieces belong (which squares to trade, where rooks should operate) rather than long move trees.
  • Your openings win rates show strength in these systems — keep the lines that give you comfortable middlegame plans and add 1 new idea per week (one pawn break or one typical sacrifice pattern).

Session plan for your next practice (30–45 minutes)

  • 10 min tactics (forks/back-rank focus)
  • 10–15 min rook endgame drills (set positions, play both sides)
  • 10–15 min 1|0 or 2|1 rapid bullets, practising the 1-second checklist and opening plans
  • Finish with one slow review of a loss — go over the last 10 moves on an analysis board and ask “what checks and forks did I miss?”

Small reminders

  • When ahead in bullet: simplify and trade into a winning endgame as fast as practical.
  • When behind on time: keep moves forcing and avoid risky promotions unless checked for tactical refutations.
  • Review one game/day (the loss vs Rochelle Wu is a good candidate) and extract 2 lessons to practice next session.

Need a deeper review?

If you want, paste one PGN you want a move-by-move critique on (I can highlight 3–5 turning points and give exact alternative moves). I can also create a 7–day micro-training plan tailored to your openings and common tactical blindspots.



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
Rochelle Wu 403W / 533L / 132D View
smallbaba 3W / 4L / 0D View
Rohan Rajaram 1W / 3L / 0D View
fda fadf 5W / 4L / 0D View
Aleksandr Razmyslov 0W / 2L / 0D View
AarchBishopp 4W / 1L / 0D View
v1per72 2W / 0L / 0D View
tennessee07 1W / 2L / 0D View
Ioannis Georgiadis 3W / 13L / 0D View
phucduc2k9 15W / 4L / 0D View
Most Played Opponents
hichem-bel 884W / 573L / 112D View Games
Rochelle Wu 403W / 533L / 132D View Games
Anastasia Avramidou 310W / 463L / 148D View Games
Nguyen Thi Mai Hung 503W / 300L / 57D View Games
Epiphany Peters 321W / 355L / 79D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 2737 2057 2266
2024 2554 2619 2229 1199
2023 2535 2551 2210
2022 2703 2585 2239 1184
2021 2513 1665 2257
2020 2501 2547 2201 1796
2019 2176 2300 1796
2018 2213 2286 1749 1805
2017 2117 2123 1823 1729
2016 1844 2012 1801 1632
2015 1591 1830 1858 858
2014 1446 1733 1705 963
Rating by Year2014201520162017201820192020202120222023202420252737858YearRatingBulletBlitzRapidDaily

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 1906W / 1237L / 339D 1628W / 1497L / 346D 87.7
2024 3342W / 2514L / 512D 2835W / 2972L / 537D 86.9
2023 2638W / 2260L / 447D 2298W / 2593L / 447D 87.0
2022 2644W / 1956L / 365D 2250W / 2309L / 370D 85.2
2021 2463W / 1958L / 328D 2235W / 2169L / 328D 82.8
2020 1938W / 1411L / 256D 1673W / 1625L / 286D 80.3
2019 1995W / 1504L / 222D 1780W / 1650L / 289D 75.5
2018 2663W / 2190L / 348D 2424W / 2460L / 325D 76.8
2017 3303W / 2992L / 386D 3125W / 3224L / 334D 59.2
2016 1537W / 1254L / 128D 1428W / 1403L / 133D 66.0
2015 644W / 518L / 40D 580W / 594L / 44D 66.7
2014 533W / 509L / 59D 503W / 536L / 53D 66.3

Openings: Most Played

Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Amazon Attack 4209 2174 1707 328 51.6%
Unknown 3285 1789 1484 12 54.5%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 2982 1441 1230 311 48.3%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 2750 1393 1121 236 50.6%
East Indian Defense 2708 1375 1048 285 50.8%
Döry Defense 1646 786 697 163 47.8%
Ruy Lopez: Berlin Defense, Berlin Wall 1624 672 738 214 41.4%
Australian Defense 1481 762 594 125 51.5%
English Opening: Agincourt Defense 1355 540 655 160 39.9%
Ruy Lopez: Berlin Defense 1255 552 586 117 44.0%
Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Nimzo-Larsen Attack 5139 2865 2036 238 55.8%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 3330 1744 1381 205 52.4%
Nimzo-Larsen Attack: Classical Variation 3076 1704 1202 170 55.4%
East Indian Defense 2445 1293 984 168 52.9%
Amar Gambit 2303 1191 992 120 51.7%
Caro-Kann Defense 2237 1156 972 109 51.7%
Australian Defense 2069 1091 870 108 52.7%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 1851 953 786 112 51.5%
Amazon Attack 1728 824 790 114 47.7%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 1323 593 639 91 44.8%
Rapid Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Amazon Attack 73 53 17 3 72.6%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 40 28 8 4 70.0%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 35 23 10 2 65.7%
East Indian Defense 31 20 7 4 64.5%
Döry Defense 17 12 3 2 70.6%
Australian Defense 16 14 1 1 87.5%
Caro-Kann Defense 15 11 3 1 73.3%
Ruy Lopez: Berlin Defense 15 10 2 3 66.7%
KGD: Classical, 3.Bc4 15 13 1 1 86.7%
Ruy Lopez: Berlin Defense, Berlin Wall 14 6 6 2 42.9%
Daily Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Unknown 12 8 4 0 66.7%
Amazon Attack 8 5 3 0 62.5%
Australian Defense 8 8 0 0 100.0%
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 8 6 2 0 75.0%
Scotch Game 8 4 3 1 50.0%
Four Knights Game 6 3 1 2 50.0%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 6 2 4 0 33.3%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 5 5 0 0 100.0%
Barnes Defense 4 0 4 0 0.0%
Unknown Opening* 4 1 3 0 25.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 41 3
Losing 23 0
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