Profile: Oscar Borras Riutort (oscar7163)
Meet Oscar Borras Riutort, a chess player whose rating evolution tells a tale of strategic adaptation and tactical resilience worthy of a grandmaster in the making. Oscillating between rapid fire and steady strategic play, Oscar's chess style has the kind of cellular efficiency biologists might envy.
Playing Strength & Style
- Rapid: A beast of quick thinking, Oscar peaked at a robust 838 in 2025, gracefully maneuvering through 116 games to maintain an average rating of 728. His rapid win rate hovers near 46%, a clever balance of attack and defense akin to a well-regulated metabolic pathway.
- Bullet: In the cramped battlefield of bullet chess, Olympic reflexes and neurons firing at high speed make Oscar’s performance molecular — peaking at 553 with an average above 515, winning slightly under 50% of nearly a thousand matches in this adrenaline-fueled rhythm of chess.
- Blitz: With fewer blitz games logged, Oscar’s win rate shines the brightest here (62.5%), proof that when it comes to fast and furious engagements, he’s the top predator.
Noteworthy Stats & Quirks
- Oscar’s longest winning streak is 9 games—call it a mitotic surge of momentum before the inevitable cytokinesis of a tough loss.
- Known for his impressive comeback rate of 63%, Oscar’s resilience after setbacks is practically cellular regeneration in action — never letting a lost piece dictate the entire game.
- His win rate after losing a piece is a perfect 100%, proving that Oscar is no easy prey; he thrives even in apparent jeopardy, like a cancer cell refusing to quit!
- He plays with moderate caution, resigning early only about 6.6% of the time, preferring to fight it out in endgames, which he frequents over 40% of the time—like a patient cellular process going towards repair and renewal.
Psychological & Timing Patterns
Oscar’s psychological tilt factor is low at 8, meaning his chess nerves are relatively steady even when the pressure cooker heats up. He exhibits the kind of mental homeostasis that would make any neurobiologist proud. His best hours to play are surprisingly varied, with a stellar 83% win rate at 21:00 — late enough for the circadian rhythm to kick in and optimize his neural efficiency.
Strategies & Opponents
Though his opening secret is “Top Secret” (perhaps ATP-powered, who knows?), his success against opponents is mixed — delivering 100% wins against some and zero against others, reflecting a dynamic interaction akin to predator-prey population cycles in an ecosystem.
Fun Fact
Oscar’s games demonstrate that chess, much like biology, thrives on adaptation. Whether sprinting through bullet exchanges or navigating the slower, more deliberate rapids of rapid chess, his playstyle is an elegant example of nature’s own game: evolutionary survival on 64 squares.