Profile: soaresjonatas
Known in the chess ecosystems as a cunning strategist with a penchant for rapid adaptations, soaresjonatas navigates the 64 squares with the tenacity of a hunting panther—and the resilience of a tardigrade. With a blitz career spanning hundreds of games, this player has shown both evolutionary versatility and biological grit.
Starting off at a blitz rating of 568 in 2023, soaresjonatas swiftly climbed to a peak blitz rating of 750 that year—a true leap in their natural selection. Though the rating has seen a few ebbing tides, much like natural populations fluctuating, soaresjonatas exhibits a remarkable rebound ability, with a comeback rate of 68.18%, proving that when the pawns fall, soaresjonatas comes back stronger.
Fascinatingly, their win rate riding on days like Saturdays and Thursdays hovers above 51%, perhaps indicating an ecological niche for peak performance in the weekend’s relaxed biosphere. Even their game cadence shows anatomical precision: with an average of 56 moves per win, patience and persistence seem genetically embedded traits.
The psychological genome reveals a tilt factor of 8 — low enough to keep cool under pressure, yet human enough to accept the occasional mutation in focus. Soaresjonatas sports a formidable longest winning streak of 9 games, a streak of dominance not unlike a wolf pack in coordinated hunt.
With a preference for the enigmatic Top Secret opening, they've played over 735 blitz games in this defense, evolving a roughly 48% win rate—a testament to mastery of cryptic strategies that baffle many. Their rapid format debut was spectacularly successful with a flawless 100% win rate, if only a fleeting glimpse of their prowess in that time phenotype.
Facing foes ranging from "dangerdarling196" to "fht91," soaresjonatas has maintained a near-perfect track record against recent challengers, showcasing a predator's keen eye and adaptable tactics. The rare early resignation rate of 3.52% suggests an underlying respect for the game’s evolutionary process, opting to fight through most scenarios.
In sum, soaresjonatas is a fascinating subject in the ecology of competitive chess: adaptable, resilient, and ever-evolving—perhaps one day reaching the apex predator status in their chess habitat. Until then, watch closely; their moves may just mutate the game in unexpected ways.