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Roquembole

Playing Since: 2018-12-24 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Rapid: 1914
6W / 2L / 0D
Blitz: 2224
10573W / 10427L / 2215D
Bullet: 2006
915W / 923L / 128D

Roquembole: The Chess Enigma

Known in the chess circles as Roquembole, this player is a fascinating mix of unpredictability, resilience, and a hint of mystery. Roquembole’s blitz prowess, peaking at an impressive rating above 2300, shows a fighter who thrives in fast-paced skirmishes on the 64 squares. Whether facing bullet or rapid, Roquembole adapts and endures, boasting a comeback rate of over 92%, proving that giving up early is simply not in their repertoire.

Starting from modest beginnings in 2018 with a blitz rating shy of 1529, Roquembole swiftly climbed the ranks, surpassing the 2100 mark by 2019 and flirting with 2300 in subsequent years. Bullet ratings peaked near 2170, and although rapid games are fewer, the performance remains punchy with win rates exceeding 80% in top secret openings. This player certainly knows how to keep opponents guessing with a blend of “Unknown Opening” adventures and classified strategies.

Style & Stamina:
Roquembole is no stranger to long, grueling games – with an average of around 82 moves per contest, their endurance rivals that of a marathon runner. Their inclination to reach complicated endgames 86% of the time suggests a love for deep strategic battles rather than quick tactical punches, though their 100% win rate after losing a piece hints at some serious resilience (or maybe psychology magic?).

Quirks and Trivia:
- Early resignations are rare, appearing in just 11% of games.
- Despite occasional tilt (a tilt factor of 12), Roquembole keeps calm and roams the board with ease.
- Interestingly, their white pieces slightly outperform black, but fear not, it’s never a dull game when Roquembole is at the helm.
- The longest winning streak recorded is 11 games, a testament to their fiery competitive spirit.

Roquembole faces opponents ranging from loyal rivals like "bajkeee" and "stealmyqueen" to the newest challengers with equal tenacity. When not crushing the clock, they battle known foes with roughly a 45% win rate, keeping the competitive spirit thrilling.

In short, Roquembole is a chess adventurer with a strong tactical compass and endurance to boot, a player who flips the board in style and knows every trick in the book – or maybe in the mysterious “Top Secret” openings they favor!


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice chunk of solid play in your recent blitz stretch. Your most recent win showed good endgame technique and patience under counterplay; the recent losses point to recurring practical problems — mainly tactical vulnerability when you push pawns and time-management blips. Below I break down what you did well, the recurring leaks, and an easy-to-follow plan to fix them.

Games I looked at (quick links)

  • Win vs bohdan-tato — Ruy Lopez style game (Cozio set-up). You converted in the knight/pawn endgame.
  • Loss vs classicschessenjoyer — Sicilian game where a pawn storm and queen tactics decided the game. Sicilian Defense

What you did well — strengths to keep using

  • Calm under fire: In the win you absorbed a sharp kingside initiative, stayed calm and found trades that neutralized the attack. That composure is a big asset in blitz.
  • Endgame technique: You converted a complex knight-and-pawn endgame by using an active king and knight, pushing passed pawns at the right moment. That shows good feel for the transition from middlegame to endgame.
  • Piece activity and exchanges for clarity: You often look to simplify when under attack — trades that remove opponent attackers and leave you with a clear plan.
  • Opening consistency: You play familiar structures (Ruy/Closed and some Sicilian lines). Knowing typical plans helps you move faster in blitz.

Recurring issues — what to fix

  • Tactical oversights after pawn storms: In the Sicilian loss you pushed pawns aggressively (g-pawn play / pawn captures) and then a queen and rook tactic exploited back-rank and coordination gaps. Before launching pawns, check for enemy counterchecks and queen routes.
  • Moving the same piece too many times early: A few games show repeated piece moves instead of finishing development. In blitz that costs tempo and gives opponents chances to strike.
  • Time management / clock awareness: Some positions show long think early (big drop on your clock around move 12 in the win) which puts you in slight time trouble later. Try to spend less time on routine developing moves so you have reserve for critical moments.
  • Tactical patterns missed: pins, back-rank threats, and queen forks appear in your losses. These are repeatable, so a pattern-drill approach will help quickly.
  • Overextending pawns without support: Pawn thrusts (g4/gxf5 etc.) are powerful but they opened lines against your king in losses. Only go for them when you have clear follow-up or superior development.

Concrete drills & short practice plan (2–4 weeks)

  • Tactics — 15 minutes daily: focus on pins, forks, discovered checks, back-rank mates. Do mixed sets but force yourself to check for enemy queen checks and forks first.
  • Blitz habit: 3 longer games per week (10+5 or 15|10). Use them to practice slow-opening decision-making and converting middlegame advantages without panicking the clock.
  • Endgame 10-minute sessions, 3×/week: knight vs pawns, king activity, and rookless endgames. Work through 10 positions and learn when to push passed pawns versus bringing king in.
  • Opening checklist (before committing to pawn storms): ask — are my pieces developed? Is my king safe? Where can the opponent’s queen go? If any answer is “no”, delay the pawn push.
  • Post-game review: after each session quickly mark 2 turning points: one tactical mistake and one strategic improvement. Fix those themes the next day.

Short tactical checklist to use during blitz

  • Before you move: check checks, captures, threats (your last 5 seconds look for these three).
  • If you push a pawn in front of your king, scan the board for opponent queen checks and pins.
  • When attacked, trade if it removes the attacker and leaves you with safe king + activity.
  • In simplified positions, activate your king early — it's often the best plan.

Opening & repertoire notes

Your database shows strong play in French/London families; keep that edge. Against the setups you just met:

  • Against setups with an early ...g6 (like your recent win) keep a plan to finish development quickly and be ready to challenge the center with pawn breaks rather than racing on the flank.
  • Against the Sicilian: when you start g- and f-pawn storms, make sure piece coordination (especially queen and rooks) is intact — otherwise the opponent will exploit open files and tactics.
  • Consider adding one or two "safe" anti-Sicilian lines where you can avoid early tactics and reach slower maneuvering middlegames to play to your endgame strength.

Small changes that give big gains (apply these in your next 10 blitz games)

  • Spend no more than 30 seconds on routine developing moves in the first 12 moves — save time for the critical phase.
  • After each pawn break, do a 3-second scan for enemy checks/forks — teach the habit.
  • When you see a tactical shot from your opponent, pause and ask: "What piece will the opponent’s queen check or fork next?"
  • Force one post-game review per session: identify the single move that changed the evaluation most, and note the pattern that caused it.

Resources & next steps

  • Tactics trainer (daily 15 minutes) — focus on forks/pins/back-rank patterns for 2 weeks.
  • Endgame practice — work on knight vs pawns and king centralization (Silman-style endgame checklist works well).
  • Play 2 slow games (15+10) each week and review with engine only after you’ve written down your candidate moves — forces better calculation.

Parting note

You have a solid foundation — good composure and endgame instincts. The quickest rating gains in blitz will come from tightening tactical awareness and slightly better clock management. Stick to the simple checklist above and you should see those small mistakes disappear in a handful of sessions.

Want a short annotated rewrite of one of the games (I can mark 2–3 critical moves and show alternatives)? Tell me which game — the win vs bohdan-tato or the loss vs classicschessenjoyer — and I’ll mark the turning points.



🆚 Opponent Insights

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Most Played Opponents
bajkeee 14W / 16L / 6D View Games
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Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 2006 2160
2024 2063
2023 2106 1914
2022 2105 2004 1969
2021 2111 2178 1665
2020 1798 2088
2019 1828 2104
2018 2016
Rating by Year2018201920202021202220232024202521781665YearRatingBulletBlitzRapid

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 685W / 576L / 135D 616W / 676L / 118D 82.1
2024 525W / 481L / 126D 507W / 518L / 108D 81.9
2023 710W / 656L / 138D 648W / 755L / 112D 83.4
2022 1119W / 1168L / 245D 1053W / 1280L / 195D 85.0
2021 827W / 837L / 197D 775W / 906L / 170D 85.7
2020 891W / 695L / 207D 806W / 822L / 175D 85.7
2019 1149W / 891L / 212D 1033W / 1002L / 184D 85.6
2018 62W / 46L / 9D 75W / 38L / 10D 84.5

Openings: Most Played

Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 1531 674 674 183 44.0%
French Defense: Exchange Variation 1302 597 566 139 45.9%
French Defense 1219 542 583 94 44.5%
Döry Defense 1167 545 504 118 46.7%
French Defense: Advance Variation 762 344 344 74 45.1%
Australian Defense 722 355 297 70 49.2%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 617 283 279 55 45.9%
French Defense: MacCutcheon Variation, Wolf Gambit 531 252 242 37 47.5%
King's Indian Defense: Fianchetto Variation, Delayed Fianchetto 480 220 216 44 45.8%
French Defense: Winawer Variation, Advance Variation 472 230 206 36 48.7%
Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
French Defense 123 55 63 5 44.7%
French Defense: Exchange Variation 121 49 60 12 40.5%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 111 55 50 6 49.5%
Döry Defense 95 50 36 9 52.6%
Australian Defense 92 44 44 4 47.8%
French Defense: Advance Variation 75 41 29 5 54.7%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 65 37 25 3 56.9%
Amar Gambit 64 25 32 7 39.1%
Hungarian Opening: Wiedenhagen-Beta Gambit 47 28 17 2 59.6%
French Defense: MacCutcheon Variation, Wolf Gambit 47 24 22 1 51.1%
Rapid Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Australian Defense 2 2 0 0 100.0%
Bird Opening: Dutch Variation 1 1 0 0 100.0%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Nimzo-Indian Defense: Leningrad Variation 1 1 0 0 100.0%
French Defense 1 1 0 0 100.0%
French Defense: Burn Variation 1 0 1 0 0.0%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 1 0 1 0 0.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 11 1
Losing 12 0
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