Avatar of SR33A

SR33A

Playing Since: 2024-10-13 (Closed for Fair Play Violations)

Wow Factor: ♟

Chess.com

Blitz: 2673
44W / 17L / 15D
Bullet: 2710
3242W / 2462L / 417D

Chess Player Profile: SR33A

Meet SR33A, a chess virtuoso whose rating evolution is nothing short of a biological marvel—transforming from a humble 1751 in Bullet to an impressive peak of 2781 in just over a year! Like a chess mitochondrion, SR33A powers every rapid-fire Bullet game with incredible energy, boasting a staggering 92.24% comeback rate and an unyielding 100% win rate after losing a piece. Talk about survival of the fittest on the 64-cell petri dish!

Rating Evolution & Playing Strength

Since 2024, SR33A's Bullet rating has juggled from a modest 1751 all the way to an astounding 2781 peak by 2025, maintaining a solid average above 2600. Despite a recent dip in Blitz from mid-2500s to the 1700s, their game count and win ratios reveal a player who thrives even under rapid oxidative stress — a.k.a. fast, pressure-packed games.

Opening Repertoire & Strategy

Much like a cell adapting to environmental pressures, SR33A's opening choices reveal a mix of classic and venomous variations. The Scandinavian Defense Mieses Kotrc Variation boasts the highest win rate at 68%, proving that when SR33A injects this opening into the game’s DNA, opponents often experience checkmate apoptosis. Other favored poisonings include the Sicilian Defense Open Classical Richter-Rauzer Dragon and the Caro-Kann Two Knights Attack, both clocking over 56% win rates.

In Blitz, the mysterious Top Secret opening dominates with an 80% win rate—clearly SR33A’s secret weapon, like an enzyme catalyzing victory under pressure.

Playing Style & Psychological Profile

With an early resignation rate at under 1%, SR33A clearly believes in giving every game a full cellular cycle, rarely dying out early. Their endgame is robust and frequent, with over 76% games reaching this phase, exhibiting stamina that would make any biologist marvel at their endurance.

Average moves per win hover around 82, suggesting SR33A relishes a long, strategic game—more of a chess tortoise than a hare. When under pressure, SR33A’s nerves seem as steady as a neuron’s firing rate: a tilt factor of only 7 signifies calm composure.

Head-to-Head & Opponent Ecosystem

SR33A plays like a dominant predator in the chess ecosystem. Besides grinding out wins against many frequent opponents, SR33A boasts a perfect 100% win rate against a plethora of challengers—clearly exerting top-level predatory dominance on the chess food chain.

Fun Fact

If SR33A were a chess piece, they’d be a queen—versatile, powerful, and capable of swift, precise attacks. Or maybe a knight, hopping unpredictably through the board’s neurons and synapses, confusing opponents into checkmate paralysis!

All in all, SR33A’s chess biography reads like an evolutionary success story—combine fierce tactical resilience, a carefully optimized opening genome, and a psychological metabolism immune to tilt, and you get a player to watch in the coming seasons.


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice session — you converted multiple tactical and endgame chances and finished a clean string of wins. Your Sicilian with an early bishop to c4 is working as a practical, aggressive system for blitz. A couple of games show the difference between excellent technique (you converting passed pawns and invading with rooks) and one game where passive king/rook play let an outside passed pawn decide the result.

What you did well

  • Clear eye for winners: you repeatedly found strong tactical shots that win material or simplify into winning endgames — e.g., the rook capture to win material and the follow-up simplifications in your win vs Lucas Aguiar Cunha.
  • Passed pawn technique: in the wins you created and pushed outside passed pawns confidently, racing to promotion and using rooks to support the advance — excellent practical play under time pressure (see the pawn march and queening vs ov_n_03).
  • Active rooks: you used rook lifts and seventh-rank ideas to create decisive threats instead of passively shuffling — that won you the decisive mating attack in the game vs chessiosaurus.
  • Opening choice and consistency: your repeated use of the bishop-to-c4 Sicilian lines gives you straightforward plans and targets. You’re getting good results from that setup (Sicilian Defense).

Main areas to improve

  • Rook and pawn endgames — king activity: your loss vs Emil Mehraliyev shows the classical mistake of not centralizing/activating your king early enough in a pawn race. In rook/pawn endings, the king must often become the attacker or blockade — practice routes to centralize the king faster.
  • Dealing with outside passed pawns: when the opponent gets a far-advanced pawn, use your rook behind the pawn or aim to create counterplay on the other side. Don’t trade into a position where their passed pawn’s path is clear.
  • Time management in blitz: several of your wins had you playing with very little time remaining. Keep a few “automatic” opening moves and short, safe plans for the first 8–10 moves so you don’t burn time; reserve the bulk of your clock for critical middle/endgame decisions.
  • Anticipate opponent counterplay before simplifying: you often simplify after winning a tactical skirmish — that’s usually correct, but double-check that simplification doesn’t leave the opponent a dangerous passed pawn or an active king.

Key moments to review (concrete)

  • Endgame vs ov_n_03 — great convert: study how you used your rook activity plus the outside passed pawn to force the queen/pawn exchange and a clear winning plan.
  • Tactical finish vs chessiosaurus — you eliminated the defender and created a mating net with the rooks. Replay that finish to see the motifs you can reuse: rook lift, infiltration, back-rank vulnerabilities.
  • Loss vs Emil Mehraliyev — focus on the phase where the opponent’s pawns advanced on the queenside. Ask: could my king have reached the queenside two moves earlier? Could my rook have attacked the pawn from behind? Those two questions often change the outcome in pawn races.

Practical 2‑week training plan

  • Daily tactics: 12–20 puzzles/day focusing on mating nets, rook tactics, and promotions (15–25 minutes).
  • Endgame drills (4× per week, 20 minutes): rook vs rook endings, rook + pawn vs rook, outside passed pawn technique. Use simple positions and play them out until conversion or hold.
  • One annotated game/week: take a recent loss or a close win (your loss vs Emil Mehraliyev is perfect). Replay it slowly, write down the candidate moves and compare with your choices.
  • Blitz habit change: in live blitz, play the first 8–12 moves in 3–5 seconds each when you’re in a familiar line — this builds a time buffer for the complex phase later.

Drills & micro-skills to practice

  • Rook behind passed pawn — set up positions and practice the three ideas: blockade, capture-from-behind, and creating a second passed pawn on the other side.
  • King activity race — practice king walks in pawn endgames: who reaches the square first and why. Time yourself to make this habitual in blitz.
  • Quick tactical check routine — before trading, quickly scan for the opponent’s strongest counter-threat (passed pawn pushes, infiltration squares, checks). If you make this a 3‑second habit you’ll avoid most “simplify-and-lose” moments.

Want to review one game in detail?

Pick one of the three recent wins or the loss and I’ll walk through the critical 6–10 move window with line-by-line alternatives and a short set of practice positions to drill.

  • Win (checkmate): chessiosaurus — I can show the mating sequence and the exact defensive resources you exploited.
  • Loss (endgame): Emil Mehraliyev — we can replay the final 20 moves and find where king/rook activity could have changed the result.

Viewer — one game to replay

Replay the checkmating game (fast review of tactical motifs and the final mating net):

Final note

You're doing a lot of things right for blitz: tactical vision, pawn promotion technique, and aggressive rook play. Tightening endgame technique and time management will turn those good wins into an even steadier streak. Tell me which single game you want a deep-dive on and I’ll prepare move-by-move coaching and 5 practice positions tailored to the errors found.



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
ov_n_03 1W / 0L / 0D View
chessiosaurus 1W / 0L / 0D View
Emil Mehraliyev 0W / 1L / 0D View
Lucas Aguiar Cunha 1W / 0L / 0D View
openingggs 0W / 0L / 1D View
Danila Poliannikov 1W / 0L / 0D View
xxreformed 5W / 5L / 0D View
sebas419 1W / 0L / 0D View
Ehsan GhaemMaghami (IRI) 0W / 0L / 1D View
Juan Armando Röhl Montes 1W / 0L / 0D View
Most Played Opponents
javicio 17W / 19L / 1D View Games
Vesna Bogdanovic 18W / 13L / 1D View Games
TaroRoot 16W / 13L / 1D View Games
Anselm Wagner 14W / 11L / 2D View Games
Shivam Pant 10W / 14L / 3D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 2702 2673
2024 2696 2496
Rating by Year2024202527022496YearRatingBulletBlitz

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 1423W / 1025L / 188D 1372W / 1081L / 183D 77.6
2024 296W / 181L / 28D 260W / 205L / 36D 76.0

Openings: Most Played

Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Caro-Kann Defense 335 191 122 22 57.0%
French Defense: Exchange Variation 283 157 101 25 55.5%
Scandinavian Defense 257 137 103 17 53.3%
Amar Gambit 249 134 98 17 53.8%
Sicilian Defense: Closed 243 124 106 13 51.0%
Sicilian Defense 221 115 95 11 52.0%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 164 90 68 6 54.9%
Nimzo-Larsen Attack 159 94 54 11 59.1%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 151 84 53 14 55.6%
Modern 140 69 56 15 49.3%
Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Amar Gambit 28 22 2 4 78.6%
Bird Opening 8 6 2 0 75.0%
English Opening 8 6 2 0 75.0%
Sicilian Defense 7 5 0 2 71.4%
Barnes Defense 6 5 1 0 83.3%
Nimzo-Larsen Attack 5 4 1 0 80.0%
Australian Defense 4 3 1 0 75.0%
Sicilian Defense: Nyezhmetdinov-Rossolimo Attack, Fianchetto Variation 4 4 0 0 100.0%
Czech Defense 4 3 0 1 75.0%
Modern 4 2 1 1 50.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 13 2
Losing 7 0
🐞 Report a Problem