Profile
Shortttay is a spirited chess player known for grinding out Daily games and surprising opponents with offbeat openings and stubborn endgames. Preferred time control: Daily — where patience, creative traps, and long-term planning shine. This concise biography highlights playing habits, favorite lines, and a few cheeky facts for fans and rival players alike.
- Username: Shortttay
- Preferred time control: Daily (patient, methodical, coffee-fueled)
- Peak Daily rating: 557 (2025-11-14) — a recent high that keeps the momentum buzzing
- Peak Rapid rating: 581 (2025-06-28) — flashes of tactical brilliance in faster games
Career Highlights
Shortttay's year has been a mix of gritty wins, occasional spectacular blunders, and a habit of turning long endgames into mini-epic sagas. Notable achievements and trends include:
- Strong Rapid experience with many decisive games — an active player across many months.
- Daily play shows steady improvement and a recent peak that reflects consistent patience in correspondence-style play.
- Impressive streaks: a longest winning streak of 6 and a longest losing streak of 4 — showing the rollercoaster nature of competitive improvement.
- Frequently faces recurring opponents such as Coach-David (multiple encounters) and hasan1704.
Playing Style & Openings
Shortttay blends quirky opening choices with serious endgame endurance — think unpredictable beginnings and marathon finishes. SEO keywords: Shortttay chess profile, Barnes Opening, Three Knights, Petrov's Defense, Daily chess strategy.
- Playing style notes:
- Endgame frequency: regularly converts middlegame fights into long endgames (Endgame Frequency ~57%).
- Average moves: wins tend to finish in ~43 moves, while losses can drag toward ~72 moves — suggests resilience even in defeats.
- Best time to play: around 12:00 — peak alertness and precision.
- Favorite and effective openings:
- Barnes Opening — used often with respectable success in both Rapid and Daily games.
- Three Knights Opening — near-perfect small-sample record in Rapid play; a niche weapon.
- Petrov's Defense — high win rate when encountered; solid and reliable for counterplay.
- Other lines: Amazon Attack, Amar Gambit, Vienna Gambit — Shortttay experiments frequently and learns quickly from results.
Notable Games
Here’s an illustrative game to watch — a short Ruy Lopez-style sequence that showcases calm development and timely castling. Play it back in a viewer to study the ideas and timing.
- Typical themes: steady development, kingside safety, then probing for weaknesses.
- Useful for studying transition to endgames and piece coordination.
Statistics Snapshot
Shortttay combines experimentation with measurable progress. Quick summary for search and scouting purposes:
- Rapid record: many matches with lots of decisive results — battle-tested and tactically alert.
- Daily record: fewer games but a recent climb to a career Daily peak, showing strategic growth.
- Strong opening performers include Petrov's Defense and Three Knights; volatile success in gambits (high-risk, high-reward).
- Tilt factor is modest; comeback rate and resilience indicate someone who learns from setbacks and keeps fighting.
Personal Notes & Quirks
A few humanizing details for those who want to play, follow, or write about Shortttay:
- Psychological trends: a moderate tilt factor — best approach is encouragement, not gloating.
- Preparation style: prefers shallow opening prep (median prep depth ~2) and relies on practical middlegame instincts.
- Fun fact: when in doubt, Shortttay sometimes opens with offbeat moves just to test whether the opponent is awake.
For rivals scouting Shortttay: be ready for unusual sidelines and a patient endgame opponent — and remember, the best time to strike is around noon.
Quick summary
Nice work — your recent games show strong tactical instincts and a willingness to go for forcing lines. You find checks, forks and decisive attacking moves (for example the successful bishop sacrifice on f7 in your win) and convert them cleanly. At the same time a few losses share the same themes: king safety and late-game coordination. Below are focused, practical steps to keep the good bits and fix the recurring problems.
What you're doing well
- Active tactics — you spot forcing checks and sacrifices quickly (example: the sacrificial Bxf7+ leading into a mating net in your recent win). Consider that a real strength.
- Transitioning a short tactical sequence into a win — you convert extra momentum into mate rather than giving your opponent counterplay.
- Openness to sharp, unbalanced positions — you don't shy away from risky lines when they promise practical chances.
- Good pattern recognition — repeated use of knight-checks and queen incursions shows you see common themes (forks, discovered checks, and back-rank weaknesses).
Example game viewer (review the final combination):
Key areas to improve
- King safety and prophylaxis — several losses ended in checkmate or decisive tactical shots against your king. Try to castle earlier when the center opens, or at least create luft and reduce back-rank vulnerabilities.
- Endgame and promotion awareness — in one loss you allowed an opponent pawn to queen and that became decisive. When the opponent has a passed pawn, prioritize blockade/attack of that pawn before launching unrelated counterplay.
- Piece coordination in the late middlegame — avoid letting your pieces become disconnected or trapped while your king is exposed. When ahead tactically, consider simplifying into a won endgame rather than continuing complications.
- Opening consistency — your best results came from a very tactical choice (Elephant Gambit), while some other openings produced poor outcomes. Pick a small, coherent repertoire you study properly rather than trying many unpracticed lines.
Concrete next steps (two-week plan)
- Daily puzzles — 10–20 tactical puzzles per day focused on forks, discovered checks and mating nets. Prioritize pattern recognition more than speed.
- One game review per day — pick a recent loss and annotate it: find the first move where the evaluation swung. Use the PGN above or your site analysis. Pay special attention to king safety and pawn promotion moments.
- Opening work — pick one reliable reply as Black and one as White. Spend three short sessions (15–20 minutes) learning typical plans, not only moves. If you like the Elephant Gambit, study a few model games from that line so you know ideas instead of just move sequences. See: Elephant Gambit.
- Endgame basics — spend two 30‑minute sessions on king and pawn vs king, and on how to stop or escort passed pawns to promotion.
- Practice applying prophylaxis — in your puzzle/game review, ask: “What does my opponent want?” and “How do I stop it?” before making an attacking move.
What to do in similar positions going forward
- If you see an opportunity like Bxf7+ or another forcing sac, verify whether your king will remain safe after the sequence ends — if your king becomes exposed, prefer a quieter winning route or a simplification first.
- When your opponent has a passed pawn approaching promotion, prioritise blockading or sacrificing material to stop it. A temporary material grab elsewhere rarely compensates for a queening pawn.
- When you're ahead tactically, look for exchanges that keep your king safe and reduce counterplay — trading queens when your opponent's attack is active often reduces risk.
- Avoid premature pawn moves that create targets on your kingside (for example unnecessary g- or h-pawn pushes) unless you calculated the consequences clearly.
Practice resources & next actions
- Set a weekly routine: puzzles (daily) + 3 focused opening reviews + 1 endgame lesson + 3 game postmortems.
- Review your wins to extract reusable ideas (e.g., the Bxf7+ pattern). Save annotated mini-moments for future reference.
- When you replay a loss, add a short note at the top: “How could I have improved king safety here?” — this trains the right questions.
- If you want I can create a short personalized training week with daily tasks and a checklist you can follow — say “yes” and I’ll draft it.
Want direct feedback on a specific game? Paste the PGN you want analyzed or ask me to annotate one of the games above (for example your win vs alysselevy or your loss vs mikacea).
🆚 Opponent Insights
| Recent Opponents | ||
|---|---|---|
| oscfab | 0W / 1L / 0D | |
| hasan1704 | 1W / 0L / 0D | |
| wannaplaychessa | 0W / 1L / 0D | |
| alysselevy | 1W / 0L / 0D | |
| shkermhmad | 1W / 0L / 0D | |
| caseylieneman | 0W / 1L / 0D | |
| eddieras12 | 0W / 0L / 1D | |
| cisa131313 | 1W / 0L / 0D | |
| dill9n | 1W / 0L / 0D | |
| achille88888888 | 0W / 1L / 0D | |
| Most Played Opponents | ||
|---|---|---|
| Coach-David | 1W / 1L / 2D | |
| alysselevy | 1W / 0L / 0D | |
| hasan1704 | 1W / 0L / 0D | |
| shkermhmad | 1W / 0L / 0D | |
| wannaplaychessa | 0W / 1L / 0D | |
Rating
| Year | Bullet | Blitz | Rapid | Daily |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 332 | 557 |
Stats by Year
| Year | White | Black | Moves |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 38W / 37L / 5D | 41W / 36L / 5D | 59.2 |
Openings: Most Played
| Rapid Opening | Games | Wins | Losses | Draws | Win Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barnes Opening: Walkerling | 22 | 13 | 7 | 2 | 59.1% |
| Amar Gambit | 19 | 8 | 10 | 1 | 42.1% |
| Amazon Attack | 16 | 6 | 8 | 2 | 37.5% |
| Barnes Defense | 11 | 8 | 3 | 0 | 72.7% |
| Australian Defense | 7 | 1 | 6 | 0 | 14.3% |
| Vienna Gambit, with Max Lange Defense | 6 | 4 | 2 | 0 | 66.7% |
| Petrov's Defense | 5 | 4 | 1 | 0 | 80.0% |
| Three Knights Opening | 5 | 5 | 0 | 0 | 100.0% |
| Alekhine Defense | 5 | 1 | 4 | 0 | 20.0% |
| Dresden Opening: The Goblin | 5 | 2 | 3 | 0 | 40.0% |
| Daily Opening | Games | Wins | Losses | Draws | Win Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barnes Opening: Walkerling | 3 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 33.3% |
| Elephant Gambit | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 100.0% |
| Amazon Attack | 2 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0.0% |
| QGD: Ragozin | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0.0% |
| Amar Gambit | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0.0% |
🔥 Streaks
| Streak | Longest | Current |
|---|---|---|
| Winning | 6 | 1 |
| Losing | 4 | 0 |