BIMA SYAHRILLA PUTRA: The Reti Raptor of Rapid Chess
Meet Bima Syahrilla Putra, also known on the board as Syhrlla4444, a player whose chess evolution is nothing short of a fascinating biological experiment. Sporting a Rapid rating peak of 900 in 2025, Bima thrives in the wild ecosystem of rapid games with an impressive average win rate, proving that in the jungle of openings, the Reti Opening is their hunting ground – a perfect 6 out of 6 triumph rate, making competitors go extinct in those matchups.
Bima’s playing style reveals a robust metabolism of patience and endgame endurance, with an average of 56 moves to victory and a tendency to linger into the 60% range for endgame frequency. This patient chameleon adapts quickly, boasting a 100% comeback rate after losing a piece and flexing a tactical brain that refuses to oxygenate early resignations.
While Blitz games might lurk in the shadows of the rating forest (peaking at 527 before dropping), Bima’s true power pulses in Rapid symbiosis: a win/loss/draw survival record of 19/9/1 keeping the dinosaurs of the competition at bay. The current winning streak of 3 is fueled by a legendary longest streak of 8 consecutive victories — a testament to Bima’s evolutionary advantage.
Psychologically, this predator has a low tilt factor (only 5), ensuring mental stamina during battles, and a distinctive preference for dawn and dusk (playing best between the 3rd and 7th hour with a 100% win rate), sneaking up on opponents like a stealthy nocturnal hunter.
Opponents beware: Bima’s repertoire is a genetic patchwork of reliable defenses and aggressive variations including the French Defense Knight Variation and Alekhine’s Defense Two Pawns Attack, each adopted with 100% success rates. This diverse gene pool makes Bima unpredictable and adaptive—a true evolutionary genius in chess biology.
With a white win rate soaring above 80%, and a tenacity that outlasts even the most resilient black defenses, Bima Syahrilla Putra is a chess specimen deeply evolved for rapid-fire dominance. Stay tuned for the next move in this living chess organism’s saga—the evolutionary arms race continues!