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The-New-Reality GM

Playing Since: 2025-01-12 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Blitz: 3089
146W / 48L / 25D

The-New-Reality: The Grandmaster of Blitz Brilliance

Meet The-New-Reality, a chess Grandmaster bestowed by FIDE, whose blitz prowess in 2025 defies both norms and expectations. With a peak blitz rating of an astonishing 2810, this player doesn't just play chess — they redefine it.

From an unassuming starting rating of 1724 at the dawn of 2025 to soaring over the 2800 mark within the same month, The-New-Reality’s journey is the stuff of legends (or at least epic Twitch highlights). In a mere 97 blitz games, they racked up an awe-inspiring 80 wins, a modest 11 losses, and a few wholesome draws to keep things classy.

With a win rate surpassing 82% when wielding their secret weapon opening "Top Secret", it's no surprise that opponents often feel like they’re facing not just a player, but a chess-playing wizard cloaked in mystery. Among their most-played foes are familiar names like mylight96 and kanachess88, though none have managed to crack The-New-Reality’s almost otherworldly form — especially considering the longest winning streak stands tall at 25 games. (Yes, 25 wins in a row — we triple-checked.)

Timing is everything, and The-New-Reality has mastered this game outside the 64 squares as well. Those who catch them playing at 18:00 hours witness a perfect 100% win rate — talk about being "in the zone." Mondays and Thursdays are also prime times, with win rates hovering around 80% and nearly 94%, respectively. PUBG can wait because this player’s blitz game is stronger when the clock strikes evening.

Playing style? Oh, it’s precise. No early resignations here — patience reigns supreme, especially in the endgame where The-New-Reality shines, with over 82% endgame frequency. They average 77 moves to secure a win, meaning this Grandmaster loves the long haul and is not afraid to drown you in a calculated positional storm.

Resilience is their middle name. A comeback rate of nearly 89% and an 80% win rate after losing a piece show they turn adversity into opportunity — just don’t ask about the tilt factor; it’s low enough to keep the game professional but high enough to remind us they’re human after all.

The-New-Reality’s approach is as psychological as it is tactical: they dominate players rated below them with a win rate over 92%, yet demonstrate fierce competitive spirit against higher-rated challengers, winning nearly 59% of those tough fights. Apparently, psychological warfare on the 64 squares suits their style — no stone left unturned.

Humble endings are rare; most games end with opponents bowing via resignation (52 wins that way), sometimes get mated outright (14 wins), or lose on time (14 wins). The few losses they sustain? Mostly close calls, with a personal nemesis named "I-Mesquita" who has managed to break through the guard on occasion.

In summary, The-New-Reality is a blitz Grandmaster who blends relentless consistency, tactical genius, and a touch of mystery. If you ever play them and feel like you’re trapped in a game of cat and mouse — well, congratulations: you’re part of their reality.


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Overview

Nice run — you converted complicated middlegames and finished cleanly in the last wins. I reviewed your most recent games (including wins vs RoadtoWC2025 and the loss vs Rustam Rustamov). Below are concrete, practical takeaways you can use immediately in blitz.

Quick replay — a useful win to revisit

Replay the game where you won after grabbing the c7 square and converting a passed pawn / rook activity advantage. Watch how you created counterplay on the 7th rank and traded into a winning rook+passed pawn ending.

What you’re doing well (keep this)

  • Creating concrete targets: you consistently identify and attack weak squares (example: c7 / seventh‑rank pressure) and punish passive opponents.
  • Clean conversion: once you win material or secure a passed pawn, you simplify sensibly and don’t give counterplay back.
  • Repertoire clarity: you stick to systems you know (e.g. Sicilian Defense and Kings-Indian-Defense lines) which lets you save time on move 1–10 and focus on middlegame plans.
  • Practical blitz instincts: you find forcing continuations (checks, trades, infiltration) quickly — critical in 3–5 minute games.

Recurring mistakes and patterns to fix

  • Loose king safety around tactical shots — in the loss vs Rustam Rustamov you got hit by a decisive tactical motif (a sacrifice / knight check on the h‑file). Double-check potential sacrifices when your king has fewer escape squares.
  • Allowing enemy piece activity in your camp — when the opponent can invade (rooks on files, knights to strong outposts) you need one defensive move earlier rather than later.
  • Time distribution: you spend long on early tactical decisions and then are short later. In blitz that often costs you the resource to calculate critical defensive moves.
  • Occasional overreliance on simplifying: trades are good, but sometimes you trade into a position where your opponent’s activity (passed pawns, rook on the seventh) becomes stronger than the nominal material balance.

Concrete fixes — what to practice this week

  • Daily 15–20 minute tactics (focus: forks, skewers, back‑rank and knight forks). Do mixed puzzles but add a filter for "mate in 2–3" and "tactical motifs around the king".
  • 3 drills for king safety: each day pick 3 lost/won blitz games and ask: "Is my king escape square sealed? Where can opponents sacrifice?" Make this a 5‑minute checklist before moving in sharp positions.
  • Endgame routine: 10 minutes on rook endgames and rook vs rook+pawn setups — many blitz wins come from knowing a few standard winning ideas (cutting the king off, doubling rooks, promoting with passed pawns).
  • Time control practice: play 10 games at your preferred blitz time but force yourself to keep 20–30 seconds on the clock by playing simpler, practical moves in non‑critical positions. Build a habit of banking 20–30s for endgame calculations.

Opening / repertoire notes

Continue using your core systems that produce practical imbalances. A few targeted tweaks:

  • Against open Sicilian lines, refresh a couple of sidelines where opponents aim for kingside initiative — memorize a concrete defensive setup (pawn structure + one knight reposition) so you don’t spend time calculating in the opening.
  • In the Kings-Indian-Defense/related lines, be ready earlier to counter advancing pawns with timely piece exchanges rather than waiting for the attack to develop fully — prophylaxis helps a lot in blitz.
  • If you like sharp play, keep one "safe" secondary choice for those days when you’re short on time (a line that reduces complications and heads to an endgame you know well).

Short weekly training plan (blitz-focused)

  • Mon/Wed/Fri — 20 min tactics + 10 short 3+0 games (focus: applying the tactic theme you trained).
  • Tue/Thu — 25 min opening study: pick one critical subvariation from your most-played line and drill it with engine-backed model games.
  • Sat — 20 min endgame practice (rook endgames, passed pawn technique) + 5 serious 5+3 games.
  • Sun — review 4 lost games from the week: 10 minutes each, write one sentence on the decisive mistake and one sentence on an improvement.

Practical tips to apply right away

  • Before every move in dangerous positions ask: "Is there a sacrifice or a fork on the king?" — make it a one-second habit.
  • When you gain material, check for counterplay first. If the opponent has activity, trade a piece to reduce that activity before collecting another pawn.
  • Bank time: in non‑critical moves choose the practical move that retains your options rather than the 'best' move that costs a lot of clock time.
  • In post‑mortems, mark the one turning point (first mistake) — that’s the highest-leverage place to improve.

Next steps

Keep the momentum. Your instincts and conversion skills are excellent — focus on tightening the defenses around the king and improving time management in the next 20–30 games. If you want, I can prepare a 2‑week personalized blitz plan with specific tactics sets and 3 opening lines to drill.

Want that 2‑week plan? Say “Yes — blitz plan” and I’ll generate it with daily schedules and puzzle sets.



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
RoadtoWC2025 2W / 0L / 0D View
Rustam Rustamov 0W / 1L / 0D View
Rudik Makarian 0W / 0L / 1D View
Aram Hakobyan 2W / 1L / 1D View
Artem Dyachuk 2W / 0L / 0D View
Vincent Keymer 1W / 2L / 0D View
Seo Jungmin 1W / 0L / 2D View
Vladimir Seliverstov 2W / 0L / 0D View
Tigran Gharamian 1W / 0L / 0D View
WhiteLotus1923 1W / 0L / 0D View
Most Played Opponents
Tobias Kölle 9W / 7L / 4D View Games
mylight96 5W / 2L / 2D View Games
Semyon Puzyrevsky 5W / 1L / 1D View Games
Aditya Mittal 3W / 1L / 2D View Games
Aleksei Sarana 0W / 4L / 1D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 3089

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 71W / 26L / 14D 75W / 22L / 11D 90.9

Openings: Most Played

Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 15 7 7 1 46.7%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 13 7 5 1 53.9%
QGD: 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.e3 10 5 4 1 50.0%
Caro-Kann Defense 9 9 0 0 100.0%
English Opening: Agincourt Defense 7 4 2 1 57.1%
Amazon Attack 7 4 2 1 57.1%
Scandinavian Defense 7 6 1 0 85.7%
Ruy Lopez: Brix Variation 7 5 1 1 71.4%
Diemer-Duhm Gambit (DDG): 4...f5 5 2 0 3 40.0%
Four Knights Game 5 1 1 3 20.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 25 2
Losing 5 0
🐞 Report a Problem