Avatar of PRIMO Prime Time

PRIMO Prime Time

Username: PtimePRIMO

Location: LA

Playing Since: 2023-12-25 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Daily: 421
79W / 191L / 3D
Rapid: 135
2W / 6L / 0D
Blitz: 252
49W / 65L / 1D
Bullet: 347
1523W / 1531L / 25D

Profile: PRIMO Prime Time (PtimePRIMO)

Meet PRIMO Prime Time, the rollercoaster chess warrior whose blitz and bullet battles are as thrilling as a grandmaster's endgame… but with a sprinkle of unpredictable flair! With a penchant for rapid-fire tactics, PRIMO has climbed from a modest rating of 100 to peak bullet glory at an impressive 456, proving that even if you don’t always play by the book, you sure know how to bring the heat.

Playing Style & Highlights

PRIMO’s games are a wild ride, averaging just about 48 moves per result, showing both patience and persistence. Early resignations are rare (only 6.4%), because giving up is just not prime time behavior. This player is a tenacious fighter too, boasting an 88% comeback rate after shaking off losses—proof that defeat is just a warm-up for the next queen promotion.

Known for thriving in the wee hours—best results between 2 and 3 AM—PRIMO shines when the rest of the chess world is asleep. Perhaps the secret to those sneaky time wins and triumphant defenses! Adaptable with both the white and black pieces, PRIMO holds a respectable near 48.5% win rate with White and nearly 47% with Black, always ready to strike no matter the color.

Openings of Mystery and Mastery

True to their enigmatic username, PRIMO loves the "Top Secret" openings, deploying them in over 2,600 bullet games with a solid success rate of around 49%. But when feeling spicy, you might catch a flashy King’s Pawn Opening or the rare but effective Saragossa Opening—both boasting win rates above 60% in bullet games. Expect the unexpected when PRIMO hits the board!

Recent Battles

PRIMO’s latest victories came clutch against opponents like jacklopiccolo and tudor_199, often winning on time—a specialist skill in the fast-paced bullet arena. Even fiery clashes with foes result in fierce battles where every second counts. Losses happen, but PRIMO’s resilience means there's always a comeback brewing.

Personality Snapshot

It's said you can measure a player's true mettle by their willingness to hang tough through ups and downs. PRIMO’s statistics tell a story of not just a competitor, but a passionate enthusiast who embraces both victories and setbacks with a grin. With a tilt factor of 19, they keep their cool just enough—never boring, always entertaining.

Fun Fact

Despite the serious chess moves, PRIMO Prime Time might be the only player who wins on time more than by checkmate—because why just checkmate when you can check the clock?

Follow PRIMO’s games if you enjoy thrilling duels, unexpected openings, and a player who plays prime time chess all day and night!


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick overview

Nice session — a string of fast wins shows you create complications and put pressure on opponents in 1|0. Your most common start was b3 (the Nimzo-Larsen style flank), you fight for kingside activity, and many games ended by flag. That tells me your practical play and speed are strengths, but pure time management and a few technical habits are holding back a more consistent score.

What you're doing well

  • Consistent, surprise opening choice (b3 / Nimzo-Larsen Attack) — it gets opponents out of book and into unfamiliar positions.
  • Creating messy positions and tactical chances quickly — you use pawn storms and piece activity to generate threats (good for bullet).
  • You exploit loose pieces and opponent errors; when the opponent panics on the clock you convert — practical strength in blitz psychology.
  • Willingness to simplify into winning lines — in your top win you landed a knight fork / tactical sequence (28.Nc6+ ... 29.Bxc6) and followed up actively to consolidate.
  • Resilient: you keep fighting in inferior positions instead of immediately resigning, which means more practical chances to win on time.

Key areas to improve

  • Time management under 1|0: many games end on clock. With no increment, every second matters — learn to trade off depth for speed when needed. (Flagging)
  • Pre-move policy: in 1|0 pre-moves can save time but also lose instantly. Use pre-moves only for safe, forcing captures/recaptures or when checks are impossible.
  • Watch for simple tactical motifs by your opponent (queen checks, back-rank threats). In a few losses you allowed direct checking sequences and mating ideas that finished the game quickly.
  • Endgame technique and simplification: when ahead on material or position, try to simplify and trade into a clear winning endgame rather than keeping complications that eat your clock.
  • Avoid excessive king manoeuvres that cost time (multiple Kd2–Kc2 moves). They can be fine positionally but are expensive in bullet unless forced.

Concrete drills & next-session plan

  • 10–15 minutes daily: Puzzle Rush / 1-minute tactics to increase pattern recognition and speed on forks, pins, skewers.
  • 20 minutes: Play 10–15 rapid 3|0 games focusing on accurate thought process — pick one concrete opening plan for White's b3 and learn 2 typical replies so you stop burning time in the opening.
  • Pre-move checklist: don’t pre-move if your opponent has a check, capture that refutes your pre-move, or if the position is unclear. Practice pre-moves only for obvious recaptures and pawn pushes that won’t be contested.
  • Endgame micro-drills: 5–10 minutes on simple rook and queen endgames and basic mates (back-rank mate, smothered mate patterns). When low on time, knowing “how to mate fast” nets wins.
  • Blunder check habit: before every move in bullet, run a 2-second scan — “Does opponent have an immediate check? A hanging piece? A tactic?” This reduces obvious losses on time after a missed tactic.

Short tactical checklist for 1|0

  • Move 1–8: play fast and normal development; avoid long think unless forced.
  • If you get a material edge: trade Queens or pieces to simplify and flag the opponent.
  • If behind on time: play safe, swap pieces, avoid risky sacrifices that require long calculation.
  • Use checks and direct threats when opponent is low on clock — practical chances are worth more than the exact best move in bullet.

Examples from your recent games

Study these short sequences to see what worked and what didn’t.

  • Winning tactic: after creating kingside pressure you landed 28.Nc6+ which forced bxc6 and let you win material with 29.Bxc6 — a good example of mixing threats and timing to force concrete gains.
  • Loss pattern: in games you lost on time you often faced strong checking sequences and back-rank/queen threats — tighten up checks safety and pre-move discipline to avoid these.

Replay your win (fast viewer):

Next steps (this week)

  • Play 30 minutes focused bullet: every time you lose on time, log one reason (pre-move, deep calculation, not spotting check). Fix one reason per day.
  • Spend two sessions learning 2 reply plans for the Nimzo-Larsen (b3) so you stop thinking in the first 10 moves.
  • Do 3 x 2-minute endgame drills (rook+king) to win faster when you’re ahead on the clock.

Handy links / references

  • Opponent from top win: lea11102012
  • Opponent from a recent loss: gustavolordelo1
  • Term: Flagging — keep this concept in mind every bullet game.
  • Term: Nimzo-Larsen Attack — reinforce 2–3 typical plans for the opening to save time early.

Final note

You have great practical instincts for bullet — the path to steady improvement is small technical fixes: pre-move discipline, a short opening repertoire for b3, and a few endgame patterns to finish quickly. Make those adjustments and the wins on the clock will start to convert into more clean, time-independent wins.



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
cythom8 0W / 1L / 0D View
jaakie81 3W / 19L / 0D View
gustavolordelo1 0W / 1L / 0D View
fivaha 0W / 1L / 0D View
lea11102012 1W / 0L / 0D View
bibithja 1W / 1L / 0D View
arthur8205 1W / 0L / 0D View
samy_wa_simba 1W / 0L / 0D View
proenzamate 1W / 0L / 0D View
mohamedraslll 0W / 0L / 1D View
Most Played Opponents
jaakie81 3W / 19L / 0D View Games
lashy01 1W / 15L / 2D View Games
ricardo_targaryen 2W / 12L / 0D View Games
claudiololol 0W / 12L / 0D View Games
mogunz92 9W / 3L / 0D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 370 252 433
2024 360 211 135 589
2023 100 100 100 1078
Rating by Year2023202420251078100YearRatingBulletBlitzRapidDaily

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 299W / 299L / 7D 277W / 333L / 6D 50.7
2024 542W / 561L / 6D 530W / 573L / 10D 48.1
2023 2W / 11L / 0D 2W / 12L / 0D 32.4

Openings: Most Played

Daily Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Amar Gambit 84 22 62 0 26.2%
Barnes Defense 52 12 39 1 23.1%
Australian Defense 22 8 14 0 36.4%
Czech Defense 19 4 15 0 21.1%
French Defense 10 5 5 0 50.0%
Nimzo-Larsen Attack 8 1 6 1 12.5%
English Opening 8 5 3 0 62.5%
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 6 2 4 0 33.3%
Bird Opening 5 2 3 0 40.0%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 5 0 5 0 0.0%
Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Amar Gambit 1307 665 633 9 50.9%
Barnes Defense 464 227 236 1 48.9%
Australian Defense 274 140 130 4 51.1%
Caro-Kann Defense 178 90 88 0 50.6%
Czech Defense 155 63 88 4 40.6%
French Defense 105 61 43 1 58.1%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 90 46 41 3 51.1%
Nimzo-Larsen Attack 77 38 39 0 49.4%
English Opening: Drill Variation 64 32 31 1 50.0%
English Opening 41 16 25 0 39.0%
Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Amar Gambit 38 19 19 0 50.0%
Barnes Defense 22 10 12 0 45.5%
Australian Defense 12 5 6 1 41.7%
English Opening 6 3 3 0 50.0%
French Defense 6 2 4 0 33.3%
Bird Opening 5 2 3 0 40.0%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 4 1 3 0 25.0%
Czech Defense 3 0 3 0 0.0%
English Opening: Drill Variation 3 2 1 0 66.7%
Amazon Attack 3 1 2 0 33.3%
Rapid Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Amar Gambit 4 0 4 0 0.0%
Australian Defense 2 1 1 0 50.0%
Barnes Defense 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Bishop's Opening: Horwitz Gambit 1 0 1 0 0.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 12 0
Losing 19 4
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