Player Profile: Ramos
Meet Ramos, a chess enthusiast whose journey is as colorful as his rating graph! With a rapid rating that has gracefully hovered around the 1100 mark over the years, Ramos proves that consistency is key, even if it means sometimes cruising just outside the grandmaster spotlight. Starting strong in 2021 with a rapid rating of 1062 and peaking at 1169 in 2025, Ramos’s games show a passionate and persistent approach to the board.
In rapid chess, Ramos has played nearly 1,600 games, notching up 773 wins—a nearly 50% win rate with a delightfully balanced record of wins and losses. When it comes to blitz and bullet formats, however, Ramos reveals a playful experimental streak, dabbling in bullet with less enthusiasm (0 wins in 2 games) and showing moderate success in blitz with a 60% win rate across a tiny sample.
His longest winning streak stands proudly at 9, proving that sometimes the stars align, and pieces cooperate. Though currently on a break from winning streaks, Ramos’s resilience shines in his comeback rate of nearly 62% and an impressive 100% win rate after losing a piece—because who doesn’t love a good underdog story?
A true strategist, Ramos averages about 50 moves in winning games and nearly 59 moves in losses, suggesting he enjoys a full battle—maybe even chess marathons. Psychologically, he admits to a tilt factor of 11 (we all have our moments), yet his rated versus casual win difference is a whopping 49%, indicating he’s a serious competitor when it counts.
Ramos’s style favors steady endgames (50% frequency) and he isn’t shy about resigning early when the position calls for it, only 3.57% of the time. Fun fact: his win rate peaks late mornings and early afternoons, hitting over 55% around 11 AM and noon—clearly his brain is most knight-move-savvy before lunch!
Among opponents, some have been utterly delightful (100% wins against "robertocanar" and "hakialoha"), while others not so much (looking at you, "marceloreiscouto"!). But in the grand scheme, Ramos plays on, learning, adapting, and making his mark one game at a time.
In short, Ramos is that friend who may not always checkmate you in under 10 moves, but will keep you entertained, challenged, and wondering what trick is up next. If chess were a movie, Ramos’s games would be the perfect blend of drama, suspense, and occasional comedy—with a few unexpected twists that keep everyone watching.