Reza Fattahi: The Chessboard Biologist
In the vast ecosystem of chess players, Reza Fattahi (aka reza1345) is a rare species flourishing with a rapid evolution in tactical awareness and strategic depth. Born to stir the ranks since 2013, Reza’s rating history reveals a genome adapted to all tempos: from bullet speed-of-light sprints to the study-heavy rapid games, and the more relaxed daily chess stints.
Reza’s opening repertoire is as diverse as a life-sized phylogenetic tree. With a wink to natural selection, his favorite openings include the Scandinavian Defense Mieses Kotrc Variation and the sly King's Indian Attack, showing a preference for aggressive, branching moves that evolve into complex positions. His behavioral patterns suggest he’s not one to resign early – with a low early resignation rate of 1.74%, preferring to fight like a persistent cell division rather than a dying bacterium.
Performance-wise, Reza displays a remarkable ability for cellular regeneration—his comeback rate is a staggering 89.94%, and he never loses after sacrificing a piece, boasting a perfect 100% win rate following a lost piece. He’s patient too, with average move counts per game creeping upwards of 70 moves in both wins and losses, indicating a slow yet cunning metabolic rate in his gameplay.
When observing his behavioral circadian rhythm, Reza tends to perform better during midday and afternoon hours (rating peaks around 12-16 PM), although like any eccentric creature, he shows a puzzling 25% win rate at midnight – a true nocturnal enigma! Psychologically, his tilt factor is moderate (14%), but he can sometimes slip like a confused protein folding, especially when switching from rated to casual modes—a win rate difference of nearly 35% suggests a preference for the adrenaline of competition.
Through the years, Reza’s ELO genome has mutated and adapted, peaking in rapid play with an impressive ~1730 rating in 2023, while maintaining a strong blitz presence around 1600+. Bullet games are more of a rat race, but even here Reza manages respectable scores.
In the animated forest of pieces and pawns, Reza Fattahi thrives like a mighty chessgrasshopper—leaping over challenges and dissecting positions with a master’s precision. A true biological marvel in the intricate biosphere of the 64 squares.