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partha ghosh

partha1962 kolkata Since 2012 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟
46.3%- 48.4%- 5.4%
Bullet 1133
0W 3L 0D
Blitz 1414
646W 824L 66D
Rapid 1491
22015W 22852L 2560D
Daily 400
1W 0L 0D

Biography of Partha Ghosh (partha1962)

Meet Partha Ghosh, a chess player whose moves are as intricate and fascinating as the double helix of DNA. With a rapid rating peaking around 1600 and a blitz high of 1545, Partha’s game evolves like a carefully mutated organism adapting to its environment.

Over the years, Partha has played thousands of rapid games, amassing over 17,000 wins, proving that resilience runs deep in his chess genome. His tactical awareness is remarkable, boasting a comeback rate of nearly 80% and an almost perfect 100% win rate after losing a piece — talk about cellular repair mechanisms in action!

He prefers living on the edge but almost never suffers from one-sided losses, with that rate kept under 2%. His preferred openings in rapid play reveal a natural selection toward aggressive yet versatile strategies such as the Philidor Defense and King's Gambit variations. It’s as if he lets his tactical instincts evolve with each game, optimally adjusting to his opponent’s genes — er, moves.

His playing style reflects patience and strategic complexity, with an average of about 71 moves per game whether winning or losing. Partha shows a slight edge playing White with a 48% win rate, compared to just under 45% with Black, proving he knows when to dominate and when to camouflage.

Interestingly, his psychological resilience is notable — a tilt factor of 17 suggests he barely mutates under pressure, maintaining composure in intense matchups. And like any good bio-machinery, he tends to evolve his game based on time — his win rates gently fluctuate across days and hours, adapting his circadian rhythm to strategic peaks.

Always ready to shake up the population of pawns and pieces, Partha is a true chess specimen whose strategic genome continues to replicate winning sequences over a massive portfolio of games. Next time you face him, beware — this player’s chess biology is as fascinating as it is formidable!

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