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redcelosia

Since 2023 (Inactive) Chess.com
45.3%- 49.1%- 5.7%
Blitz 274
21W 26L 3D
Daily 603
3W 0L 0D

Redcelosia: The Botanical Blitz Maestro

Meet redcelosia, a chess player whose growth on the 64-square board is as colorful and resilient as their namesake flower. With roots planted firmly in both daily and blitz formats, redcelosia's journey reflects a true biological blend of strategy and adaptability.

In the garden of blitz chess, redcelosia has sprouted 44 games with a fluctuating rating range—rising as high as 743 in 2025 before settling around 290. While there have been a few thorns along the way, with 22 losses and 3 draws, their win rate of nearly 43% keeps this player blooming. Their daily chess profile is more like a rare perennial – unbeaten across 4 straight wins, boasting a max rating of 603 in 2023. Talk about photosynthesizing victories!

Opening Garden

Redcelosia sows seeds in many openings, frequently branching into the King's Pawn and Queens Pawn territories with a winning 50% success rate in several lines, like the Englund Gambit and the Indian Game Knight Variation. Although the Queens Pawn Opening Chigorin Variation currently resists growth (0% win rate), their roots run deep enough to experiment and learn.

Tactical Tendrils and Psychological Pollination

With a comeback rate of 61% and a perfect 100% win rate after losing a piece, redcelosia's resilience is nothing less than chlorophyll-charged. Even when the board's storm clouds gather, they rarely wilt, maintaining a low early resignation rate of 4.55% and a steady tilt factor of 6 – a modest amount of emotional photoshopping in the heat of battle.

Patterns of Play

Like a plant following the sun, redcelosia's best performance emerges on Fridays and Thursdays with perfect 100% win rates, and a sunny disposition during late hours (midnight and 15:00) also correlating to consistent wins. The average game length and move count tell of a player who enjoys a good endgame bloom, with nearly half of their games stretching toward complex finishes.

Whether facing well-known opponents like davitykale (100% win rate) or challenging new pests like emanresuee (a thorny zero-win), redcelosia’s chess garden is ever evolving, with plenty of room to grow, adapt, and perhaps even sprout a queen or two.

In the kingdom of chess, redcelosia continues to blossom—sometimes slow, sometimes vibrant, but always ready to photosynthesize another win.

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