Avatar of Profylactic

Profylactic IM

Since 2022 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
49.5%- 43.3%- 7.2%
Bullet 2440
129W 127L 16D
Blitz 2598
2631W 2295L 386D
Rapid 2176
5W 0L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

What’s going well in your bullet games

You’ve demonstrated a strong willingness to fight for initiative and you can convert active play into concrete advantages when your opponent overextends. In decisive moments, your tactical awareness and piece activity helped you press for a finish, including finding sharp moves that create direct threats. You also show good competence in simplifying when you have the edge, which helps you close out quick games decisively.

  • You take dynamic approaches when the position invites it, keeping pressure on the opponent’s king and pieces.
  • When your opponent misplays or overreaches, you’re able to capitalize with coordinated piece activity.
  • In several games you converted favorable middlegame chances into clear results by maintaining concrete plans rather than getting bogged down in overthinking.

Key improvement areas to focus on next

  • Time management in ultra-fast games: a few losses and time-related troubles suggest you can benefit from a simple, repeatable opening plan and a solid, quick decision process for the first 10 moves.
  • Defense against tactics: ensure you routinely scan for tactical traps and counterplay from your opponent, especially when you push heavy pieces into aggressive lines.
  • Opening consistency: lean toward stable, straightforward lines that lead to clear middlegames, so you spend less time risking unclear positions in the early phase.
  • Endgame conversion: practice converting small advantages into wins, especially in rook-and-pawn endings or positions with reduced material where precise technique matters.

Opening choices that fit your current strengths

Your data indicates you perform well with solid, principled openings that keep the game simple and instructive. Favor these lines to reduce early complications and maintain practical chances in bullet games:

  • Caro-Kann Defense — a solid, reliable choice that often leads to good endgames and clear plans for both sides. Consider sticking with this when you want to avoid sharp theory in quick games. Caro-Kann Defense
  • Nimzo-Larsen Attack — shows strong results and often yields flexible middlegames with straightforward development. Useful when you want to steer the game into manageable plans. Nimzo-Larsen Attack
  • French Defense: Tarrasch Variation — offers balanced structures and clear pawn breaks, which can translate into solid, repeatable setups in bullet. French Defense: Tarrasch Variation

These are your better-performing openings from your recent data, so they’re good places to anchor your practice. For quick reference, see your opening notes in Profylactic's study library.

Practical drills and a simple practice plan

  • Time-management drill: use a fixed time budget for the opening phase (e.g., 1 minute for the first 8 moves) and practice sticking to it in 15-minute training games. This helps reduce time pressure in live bullet.
  • Pattern drills: daily short exercises focused on common tactical motifs (forks, pins, queen traps) so you recognize them quickly in fast games.
  • Opening consolidation: spend 10–15 minutes weekly on one of your preferred openings to reinforce key plan ideas and typical middlegame targets, so you don’t chase uncertain lines under time pressure.
  • Endgame simplification practice: pick simple endings (rook and pawn vs rook, or king and pawns endings) and drill converting slight advantages into win lines.

Extra notes

To review your progress, you can keep an eye on your profile updates and openings portfolio. For quick reference, see your profile overview: Profylactic. If you want to explore a named opening in your study notes, see: Caro-Kann Defense or Nimzo-Larsen Attack.


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