Hi Svitlana!
First of all, congratulations on maintaining a performance around the mid-2400 bullet range – that already puts you in the very top percentile. According to 2542 (2025-02-08), your ceiling is still climbing, and there is plenty of evidence in your games that you can keep pushing higher.
What you are already doing well
- Consistent Strategic Framework. With White you steer almost every game into a King’s Indian Attack / Réti hybrid (1 Nf3, 2 g3, 3 Bg2). The pawn storms you unleashed against Miguel Sierra – see 15. h4 g5 16. g5! – are textbook.
- Clarity in Simplified Positions. In several endings (e.g. the win vs. Landon Meadors), you convert extra material smoothly, coordinating king and rook with minimal hesitation.
- Tactical Awareness. Your 24.Nf7+!! shot in the recent win is the kind of resourcefulness that keeps opponents under pressure even when you’re low on time.
Key improvement areas
1. Time management & conversion speed
Seven of your last eight losses were on time, often in technically winnable or at least drawable positions (e.g. the passed a-pawn vs. nissou-ach). Bullet obviously rewards speed, but there are practical tweaks you can make:
- Decision templates. Pre-decide how you will react to common structures (…d5 in your KIA, early …Nf6/…d6 vs. b3 systems) so you spend zero time in the opening.
- 80-20 clock rule. Aim to have at least 20 sec left when queens leave the board. If you slip under that mark, switch to instant-move mode: safe pre-moves, avoid fancy manoeuvres.
- Simplify sooner. When clearly ahead (extra rook vs. ahmedhaideriraq), trade into ► K+R-vs-K endings instead of searching for mate; the technique is faster and bullet-proof.
2. Black repertoire resilience
Your two main defences – the Scandinavian (…d5 exd5 Nf6) and the Alekhine-Scandinavian hybrid – work, but they demand precise calculation after early queen forays (…Qxd5/Qa5). In bullet, that precision costs time.
- Consider adding a trusty, “hands-free” system such as the Modern Defence (…g6 …Bg7) or even the Bullet-special King’s Indian set-up (…d6 …Nf6 …g6) so your piece placement is mostly automatic.
- If you keep the Scandinavian, rehearse the critical forcing lines with flash-cards until they’re muscle memory.
3. End-game pattern library
Your end-game fundamentals are solid, but a faster pattern recall will help you preserve time. Add these to your quick-solve routine:
- Rook + two connected passers vs. rook. (You had this vs. raskolnikov_1866.) Drill the bridge-building method so every move is instant.
- Opposite-colour bishop endings. Several time-outs occurred here. Remember the “two-files-rule” and the concept of the wrong rook pawn wrong rook pawn.
Opening snapshot
The tree below shows how often each branch has appeared in your last 50 games. Green = >55 % score; red = <45 %.
Training suggestions for the next 4 weeks
- Bullet sparring with increment (1 + 1). Focus on finishing with >15 sec vs. sparring partners rated 200 pts below you. Goal: ingrain faster mouse/brain flow.
- Daily 10-minute tactic rush. Solve 25-30 mate-in-2/3 problems to sharpen pattern speed.
- End-game ladder: play out 20 R+P vs. R, 20 B+P vs. B opp-col positions against an engine set to 2200. Annotate only the time wasted.
- Repertoire micro-prep: create a bullet “mini-file” (10 lines max) for each side of the Scandinavian that you promise yourself you will stick to without thinking.
Positive mindset reminder
“I will not let the clock decide winning positions.”
Say this before each bullet session!
Quick reference & inspiration
• Most recent tactical masterpiece:
• Win-rate heat map:
Keep the energy high, keep the mouse moving, and enjoy the grind toward 2500!