Luis Guillermo Antúnez Soler is a dedicated chess player who has carved a niche as a fighting competitor in rapid and standard time controls. A titled player, he earned the FIDE Candidate Master title, marking him as one of the bright voices in his chess community. Known for a lively, resourceful style and a love of dynamic positions, he treats the chessboard like a playground where ideas collide and clocks race.
Chess Career and Title
From early tournaments to national events, Luis has matured into a reliable competitor who thrives in tough games. His Candidate Master title from FIDE recognizes his positional understanding and practical fighting spirit. He frequently tests opponents with ambitious openings and keeps resilience in the face of pressure.
Playing Style
Preferred time control: Rapid
Endgames: Strong in the late phase, navigating complex endings with technique and tenacity
Tactical readiness: Thrives in middlegame clashes and shows solid comeback potential
First move tendencies: Often begins with 1.e4, exploring active, open positions
Career Highlights
Longest winning streak observed: 41
Notable mastery across Bullet, Blitz, and Rapid formats with consistent results
Known for creative openings and flexible plans, frequently steering games into sharp, fighting lines
Profile
Explore more about his games and profile: luissantunez93.
You’ve been performing steadily in rapid games, with a positive trend in your rating over recent periods. Your pace of improvement is sustainable when you continue consistent practice, review, and careful decision-making in middlegames.
What you’re doing well
You have a solid opening foundation and seem comfortable in a variety of classical setups, including Scotch, Caro-Kann, and French defenses. This breadth helps you handle different pawn structures and middlegame plans.
Your ability to activate pieces in open positions stands out. When lines open up, you coordinate rooks and minor pieces effectively and create practical chances.
You show perseverance in longer games, maintaining focus through complex positions and maintaining pressure on your opponent.
Areas to improve
Time management in critical middlegame moments. In sharper positions, you can benefit from setting a quick, clear plan for the next 2–3 moves and sticking to it to avoid getting caught in time trouble.
Endgame technique. There are opportunities to simplify when ahead and convert advantages more decisively, especially in rook-and-pawn endings. Practice standard endgame concepts and common rook endgames from your opening choices.
Pattern recognition for tactical threats. Increase exposure to typical tactical motifs that arise from your frequent openings to spot traps or forcing lines earlier.
Repertoire refinement. While your breadth is strong, narrowing a couple of openings to a deeper, familiar plan can help you play faster and with clearer middlegame ideas.
Your results across several openings suggest good adaptability and comfort with both sides of the board. The strong showing in multiple lines indicates solid preparation and the ability to execute plans with reasonable consistency. To keep this advantage, consider:
Choosing a compact, reliable subset of openings to study deeply (including typical middlegame plans, common pawn structures, and key strategic ideas).
Pairing openings with concrete middlegame themes you enjoy (for example, assertive piece play in open games or solid maneuvers in semi-closed structures).
Regular post-game annotations focused on the transition from opening to middlegame, to ensure you convert early advantages into tangible gains.
Practical training plan (next 4 weeks)
Week 1–2: Endgame and pawn endgame practice. Do 15 minutes of rook endgames and key conversions after each session to improve accuracy in the final phase.
Week 2–3: Repertoire deepening. Pick 2 openings you enjoy most (one for White, one for Black) and study 5 typical middlegame plans, 3 common pawn structures, and 2 standard endgames arising from each.
Week 3–4: Tactics with opening context. Solve puzzles that arise from your chosen openings (patterns like central breaks, piece activity, and tactical motifs common in those lines).
Ongoing: Do a quick daily review (5–10 minutes) of at least one recent game, focusing on the moment you decided the plan and where you could have improved timing.
Quick tips for your next games
In the early middlegame, aim for a clear plan based on the pawn structure and piece activity you’ve created. If you’re unsure, strive for solid development and king safety first, then look for dynamic ideas.
When ahead, favor simplifications that keep you with a comfortable endgame. If tactical complications arise, pause briefly to verify the main line before committing to an aggressive sequence.
Maintain consistent clock discipline. Allocate a small, fixed amount of time for the critical decision (for example, the next 2–3 moves) and stick to it to avoid time pressure.
Recent game reference
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