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notchessarual

Since 2023 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
45.0%- 51.1%- 3.9%
Bullet 1016
218W 262L 16D
Blitz 987
361W 392L 35D
Rapid 1443
117W 136L 10D
Daily 720
1W 2L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice energy in your recent bullet session — you keep fighting for active squares and grabbing material when it appears. The loss vs. plan_of_attack1 shows a few recurring bullet-specific issues: king safety, doubled pawns after an early recapture, and a couple of greedy moves that handed the opponent fast tactical counterplay. Below are focused, practical fixes you can apply right away.

What you did well

  • You look for tactical chances and don’t shy away from captures — that aggression wins games when it's timed right.
  • You contest the center and try to create targets (the c4 / d4 push and knight jumps were energetic).
  • You successfully pick up pawns and material opportunities quickly — useful in bullet where speed matters.

Key mistakes to fix (from the loss vs. plan_of_attack1)

  • King safety: after exchanging on f3 you kept the king in the center (Ke2, then Kc2). In bullet, if you can't castle safely, try to keep pieces around the king or head to safety immediately — a wandering king is an easy target for checks and tactics.
  • Pawn structure: recapturing with the pawn on f3 (gxf3) doubled your pawns and opened the g-file in front of your king. When you recapture, ask: does this help development or expose the king?
  • Loose-piece tactics: moves like Nb5 followed by Nxa7 are tempting — but they often hand the opponent a freeing central break (…d5 / …dxc4). Before grabbing a pawn, check if opponent gets tempo or active counterplay.
  • Time management / flagging: several of these games ended on the clock. In bullet, small time buffers and quicker decision rules (see drills below) win more than perfect moves.

Concrete drills you can do this week

  • Tactics blitz (10–15 minutes): 12–15 one- or two-move puzzles focused on forks, pins and discovered attacks. These are the patterns that showed up against you.
  • 5-minute practice games with a rule: if position is unclear by move 10, swap into simpler plans (trade pieces or castle). Force yourself to prioritize king safety over material greed in these games.
  • Opening repetition: pick one Reti / b3 line you like and play 10 training games only on that line — learn the typical pawn breaks and safe kingside setups so you don't get surprised by …c5 and …g6 responses.
  • Clock drills: play 10 games with 10+2 or 3+0 but force yourself to keep 10 seconds minimum. Practice premoves only for safe recaptures to avoid Mouse Slip/Flag-fall risks.

Patterns to practice (short checklist)

  • Recognize when a recapture opens lines to your king (doubled pawns, open g-file).
  • Watch for knight forks on e5/f4/d3 and queen checks along the long diagonals — these appeared in your games.
  • If you grab a “free” pawn, ensure opponent cannot play an immediate central push that gains tempo (…d5 or …dxc4 in your loss).
  • Small exchange or piece simplification when low on time beats speculative tactics that need time to calculate.

Immediate next-game checklist

  • Before recapturing with a pawn in front of your king, ask: “Does this open a file or diagonal to my king?” — if yes, pause and consider alternatives.
  • If you can castle safely within a couple of moves, do it. In bullet, safe king > extra pawn almost always.
  • Avoid grabbing remote pawns (like a7) unless your pieces stay coordinated; always check opponent’s counterplay first.
  • Keep a 5–10 second reserve on the clock. If you can’t, simplify or repeat moves to save time.

Study plan — 2 week cycle

  • Week 1 — Tactics focus: 20 minutes daily on forks/pins/discovered-attacks + 5 bullet games concentrating on king safety and not winning “greedy” pawns.
  • Week 2 — Opening & practical play: 30 minutes opening drill on your chosen Reti line (Reti Opening) and 10 rapid games (10|3) to practice the ideas without the extreme bullet clock pressure.
  • Repeat: alternate tactics and opening weeks. Track whether your time-control losses drop.

Example — the finished game (play through)

Study this short replay and stop at each capture: ask “Does this help my king / improve piece coordination?”


Final notes & encouragement

Your opening chart shows you play a lot of varied systems — that’s a strength. Focus now on tightening a few small areas: king safety, avoiding risky pawn recaptures in front of your king, and managing the clock. With a little structure to your training (tactics + deliberate opening practice) you’ll convert more of those material chances into wins rather than counterplay losses. Keep grinding — you’re building a solid foundation.

Want a tailored 7-day tactical set or a compact opening cheat-sheet for your most-played Reti lines? I can create that next.


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