Avatar of sequevoyaolvidarte

sequevoyaolvidarte

Playing Since: 2020-05-18 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Rapid: 1819
57W / 20L / 10D
Blitz: 2286
838W / 586L / 129D
Bullet: 2315
43793W / 39961L / 4510D

Profile of sequevoyaolvidarte

Sequevoyaolvidarte is a true bullet chess maestro who dances on the edge of chaos with a peak rating soaring above 2400. Since bursting onto the scene in 2020, they've blitzed through tens of thousands of games, proving that speed and style can indeed win the day—even if occasionally balanced by a handful of losses and draws.

With almost 50,000 bullet games played, and a razor-sharp win rate hovering just over 50%, this player’s bullet repertoire is as mysterious as a "Top Secret" opening. Not one to shy away from intense time scrambles, sequevoyaolvidarte has a remarkable comeback rate of 93%, proving that even when the chips—or pawns—are down, resilience defines their grinding style.

Blitz and rapid? They play that too, with solid 60% and uphill-of-65% win rates, respectively. Their tactical awareness is truly next-level, boasting a perfect 100% win rate after losing a piece—because queens sometimes fear a knight with a plan. The longest winning streak extends to 26 games, a testament to the thrilling rollercoaster ride this chess enthusiast provides their opponents.

Their style? Expect long battles with an average of nearly 78 moves per win, embracing complexity and endgame finesse (played endgames nearly 85% of the time). Early resignation isn’t their thing—unless the resignation is from their opponents, overwhelmed by their relentless pressure.

Psychologically, sequevoyaolvidarte keeps it cool, with a tilt factor of 19 and a mild fall when switching from rated to casual games (a humble reminder that even the best have "off" days). Their activity peaks in early mornings and late nights—probably when coffee kicks in or the adrenaline surge hits.

Known for their fierce rivalry with "johnsonxi" (470 clashes) and a hearty 56% win rate against "damianco2", sequevoyaolvidarte has a knack for adapting to opponents and dishing out consistent performances. Although their bullet prowess reigns supreme, this player’s infectious love for the game and cheeky username assure us: even if you lose, you'll never forget the experience.

In summary: fast as a lightning bolt, crafty as a fox, and impossible to forget—sequevoyaolvidarte keeps the chess world guessing, one bullet game at a time.


Coach's Avatar

Quick summary

Nice steady progress — your rating trend is positive and your strength‑adjusted win rate (~0.69) is healthy. The recent rapid loss (Pirc/Modern structure) ended in a rook+pawn/king endgame where an outside passed pawn decided things. I reviewed the game below so you can replay and follow the key moments.

Replay the full game:

What you did well (repeatable strengths)

  • You keep an active king in the endgame — that often wins games and you used it well trying to stop advancing pawns.
  • Good opening repertoire variety. Your Najdorf and Moscow lines are particularly strong — stick with what works. (Sicilian Defense: Najdorf Variation)
  • When the position got tactical you looked for trades and simplifications — simplifying into endgames is a solid practical choice when ahead or equal.
  • Time management looks stable; you weren’t bullet‑rushed and kept enough time to think in critical moments.

Recurring issues and concrete fixes

Across the recent losses the same themes show up: letting an opponent create a fast outside passed pawn, and simplifying into a rook+pawn ending without a clear plan to stop promotion.

  • Issue: Outside passed pawn promotion (h‑pawn in the recent game).
    • Fix: If your opponent creates an outside passer, prioritize stopping the pawn or creating counterplay on the other side immediately (active rook on the 7th/8th, king blockade, or a passed pawn of your own).
    • Practical drill: practice king vs pawn races and rook vs pawn endgames (Lucena / Philidor positions).
  • Issue: Trade choices that favour the opponent's pawn structure.
    • Fix: Before exchanging, ask: “After trades, who gets the better king activity and who gets the passed pawn?” If opponent’s passed pawn will decide the game, avoid trades that eliminate your best defensive piece.
  • Issue: Passive rook placement after simplification.
    • Fix: In rook endgames aim to place rooks behind passed pawns or on open files and keep them active. If you simplify, have an endgame plan (blockade, cut off the king, or create passed pawn).

Tactical and calculation advice

  • Double‑check pawn pushes that will open files near your king. In the loss you allowed a pawn chain advance (…f‑pawn and then h‑pawn) to become decisive — calculate one extra move on pawn storms.
  • When you see the opponent’s king marching to central/square control, calculate king routes and pawn promotions first — they are often decisive in endgames.
  • Work on 2–4 move concrete calculation: practice puzzles with mate nets and pawn races; aim for accuracy rather than speed.

Opening & middlegame plan suggestions

  • Against the Pirc/Modern (Pirc Defense), prepare a plan for when Black plays …f5 early — often you should aim for a pawn break in the center (c2–c3 then d4 or e4–e5 at the right time) and avoid premature simplifications.
  • If you choose Bxh6 type trades, make sure you have concrete follow‑up to neutralize the active g‑pawn — otherwise you give the opponent half a file or targets.
  • Keep practicing your favorite openings (you have very good results with several Sicilian lines). Focus on the typical pawn structures and plans rather than memorizing long move orders.

Endgame training plan (next 2–4 weeks)

  • Daily: 15 minutes tactics (puzzles focusing on pawn races and rook tactics).
  • 3× per week: 20–30 minutes of targeted endgame study — Lucena, Philidor, king and pawn vs king, and simple rook endgames.
  • Weekly: Review one lost game fully — annotate your thought process move by move (what you planned, what you missed).
  • Goal: Stop 1 outside‑passed pawn promotion out of 3 practice endgame drills within 2 weeks.

Practical tips for your next rapid games

  • Before trading into a pure pawn/rook ending, pause and imagine the pawn structure 6 moves ahead — if opponent will have a running pawn, avoid the trade or create counterplay first.
  • Use rooks actively: behind passed pawns or cutting the king off. Passive rooks lose races.
  • When opponent offers simplification, ask if you can stop their outside passer — if not, decline or complicate tactically.
  • Keep building your opening strengths (Najdorf / Moscow are working) and add one reliable endgame concept every week.

Next steps & resources (placeholders)

  • Review this opponent's profile and tendencies: jcrispal0854
  • Study the Pirc pawn structures: Pirc Defense
  • Endgame reading/video: search for tutorials on Rook Endgame and Lucena/Philidor positions.
  • When you finish a game, save the critical position and replay it with a slower clock to find practical defensive resources.

If you want, I can: (a) annotate the critical 10–15 move sequence from the loss with ideas to try instead, or (b) generate a 2‑week training schedule tailored to the openings you play. Which do you prefer?



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
Leonardo Rossi 9W / 11L / 0D
liberal_eagle 7W / 4L / 0D
bernadya03 1W / 0L / 0D
applevishal 0W / 1L / 0D
janekristiani 1W / 0L / 0D
drxeneinstein 0W / 1L / 0D
finaltofuture 1W / 0L / 0D
dmrogers1 11W / 13L / 2D
jayrov 1W / 0L / 0D
disguisedvegemite 1W / 2L / 0D
Most Played Opponents
JohnsonXi 200W / 249L / 21D
damianco2 259W / 174L / 25D
cosmicshrine 104W / 111L / 12D
Cayetano 94W / 75L / 4D
playfaster260 63W / 77L / 8D

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 2213 2286 1819
2024 2316 2252 1758
2023 2211 2100 1673
2022 1965 1984 1671
2021 2029 2012 779
2020 2237 1982
Rating by Year2020202120222023202420252316779YearRatingBulletBlitzRapid

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 2985W / 2757L / 315D 2909W / 2823L / 336D 80.7
2024 4819W / 4157L / 447D 4683W / 4261L / 446D 79.1
2023 3006W / 2475L / 220D 2830W / 2600L / 220D 76.2
2022 2552W / 1270L / 173D 2539W / 1302L / 149D 76.3
2021 2596W / 2907L / 269D 2565W / 2946L / 276D 78.0
2020 1040W / 1057L / 112D 1004W / 1139L / 107D 79.0

Openings: Most Played

Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Scandinavian Defense 3438 1775 1485 178 51.6%
Sicilian Defense 3406 1680 1563 163 49.3%
Caro-Kann Defense 3274 1581 1549 144 48.3%
Sicilian Defense: Najdorf Variation 2957 1495 1321 141 50.6%
French Defense: Advance Variation 2900 1560 1210 130 53.8%
Sicilian Defense: Closed 2618 1179 1330 109 45.0%
Amazon Attack 2041 1044 900 97 51.1%
English Opening: Caro-Kann Defensive System 2005 1031 892 82 51.4%
Amar Gambit 1920 940 898 82 49.0%
Slav Defense: Alekhine Variation 1907 1021 794 92 53.5%
Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Sicilian Defense 75 46 26 3 61.3%
Sicilian Defense: Najdorf Variation 75 42 26 7 56.0%
French Defense: Advance Variation 40 26 11 3 65.0%
Slav Defense: Alekhine Variation 36 22 10 4 61.1%
Scandinavian Defense 33 17 12 4 51.5%
Sicilian Defense: Closed 32 19 11 2 59.4%
Caro-Kann Defense 30 19 6 5 63.3%
Amazon Attack 28 15 10 3 53.6%
Sicilian Defense: Alapin Variation 25 17 8 0 68.0%
Slav Defense 25 15 8 2 60.0%
Rapid Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Sicilian Defense 5 3 2 0 60.0%
Caro-Kann Defense 4 1 0 3 25.0%
Slav Defense: Alekhine Variation 4 3 1 0 75.0%
Sicilian Defense: Najdorf Variation 4 4 0 0 100.0%
Scandinavian Defense 3 0 1 2 0.0%
Ruy Lopez: Classical Defense, Benelux Variation 3 1 2 0 33.3%
Sicilian Defense: Moscow Variation, Haag Gambit 3 3 0 0 100.0%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 3 2 1 0 66.7%
Amazon Attack 3 2 0 1 66.7%
Slav Defense 2 0 2 0 0.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 26 3
Losing 19 0