Avatar of Tornikidze

Tornikidze FM

Playing Since: 2025-08-10 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Blitz: 2811
287W / 307L / 50D
Bullet: 2858
168W / 108L / 22D

Biography

Tornikidze is a bold competitor who rose from the chatter of early club games to the fast-paced world of Bullet chess. A recognized FIDE Master, they earned the title through relentless practice, clever tricks, and a knack for turning time pressure into an advantage. Known for their love of rapid-fire play and fearless openings, Tornikidze brings a combative spirit to every online arena and over-the-board event alike. For fans and fellow players, they’re as entertaining as they are dangerous on the clock. Tornikidze

Preferred time control appears to be Bullet, where instinct, speed, and surprise moves collide in spectacular fashion. When not chasing the clock, they’re likely studying a sharp line or composing a playful quick-game novelty to keep friends amused after a win or a loss.

Openings and Style

Tornikidze’s repertoire blends aggression with practical solidity, thriving in the fast lanes of Bullet and Blitz.

  • Nimzo-Larsen Attack (Bullet): 25 games, 15W-7L-3D; WinRate 60%
  • Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation (Bullet): 18G, 10W-6L-2D; WinRate 55.56%
  • Modern (Bullet): 10G, 6W-3L-1D; WinRate 60%
  • Amar Gambit (Bullet): 9G, 5W-4L-0D; WinRate 55.56%
  • King’s Indian Attack (Bullet): 5G, 5W-0L-0D; WinRate 100%
  • Italian Game: Two Knights Defense (Blitz): 14G, 9W-4L-1D; WinRate 64.29%
  • Sicilian Defense: Closed vs Anti-Sveshnikov (Blitz): 14G, 4W-7L-3D; WinRate 28.57%

These lines show a willingness to steer a game into dynamic, tactical seas where resourcefulness often trumps pure theory.

Streaks and Rivalries

  • Longest Winning Streak: 11 games
  • Current Winning Streak: 0
  • Longest Losing Streak: 7 games
  • Current Losing Streak: 1

Tornikidze has logged many battles against a wide array of opponents, with notable results across multiple contests. The playbook includes frequent sweeps against several persistent rivals and spirited fights to the final move.

Snapshots

Curious about recent activity or a thematic snapshot of their games? Check the internal profile and sample games here: Tornikidze

For illustrative moments in games, a compact PGN snapshot can be explored with


to visualize a typical fast start.


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Bulleted feedback on your recent bullet games

You recently had a mix of results in bullet practice: a win, a loss, and a draw. Your openings show you’re confident in flexible systems, and you can convert advantages under time pressure. There are clear opportunities to tighten decision making, improve safety in sharp positions, and finish games more decisively when the clock is tight.

What you did well

  • Strong performance under time pressure in at least one win. You kept focus, found active moves, and leveraged time pressure in your favor.
  • Consistent development in the openings you’ve chosen, especially in flexible setups where you can steer the game into comfortable middlegame plans.
  • Active piece coordination in many middlegame moments, using rooks and minor pieces to pressure key squares and create practical chances.
  • Ability to recover from imbalances and keep games competitive, even when the position becomes tactical or stretched.

What to improve

  • Time management under fire: aim to secure a stable, simple plan in the first 8–12 moves of each bullet game. If you sense you’re slipping into long tactical lines, pivot to a safer, more straightforward plan to avoid blunders near the clock.
  • King safety in sharp sequences: in some losses, the middlegame revolved around quickly opening lines against your king. Practice quick safety checks before committing to aggressive pawn pushes or piece trades.
  • Endgame simplifications: when you have a material or positional edge, look for clean simplifications that reduce risk under time pressure. Practice converting advantages in rook-and-pawn endings or minor-piece endings typical in bullet.
  • Pattern recognition in typical bullet traps: become familiar with common mating nets or back-rank motifs that appear in your Opening choices. Quick recognition helps you either avoid or exploit these patterns more reliably.

Opening insights from your data

  • Nimzo-Larsen Attack family has produced solid results for you. It often leads to a flexible, positional middlegame with honest plans. Keep a simple follow-up plan to avoid getting tangled in heavy tactics when the clock is short.
  • Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation and Modern setups also show promise. They reward steady development and clear, repeatable plans. If you enjoy these, build a small bullet-ready repertoire with a few fixed ideas you can execute quickly.
  • King's Indian Attack and some aggressive lines have high win rates but require precise calculation. Use them in practice games where you have a bit more time to get comfortable with the typical middlegame themes.
  • East Indian Defense and other less favorable lines shown in the data suggest you should prepare concrete, safe responses to avoid getting into dangerous tactical melees when the opponent presses early.

Practice plan to boost bullet results

  • Time-boxed drills: practice 5+0 or 3+2 games focusing on getting a solid development lead by move 8, then evaluating two good plan options instead of chasing complicated tactics.
  • Endgame quick wins: train rook endings and opposite-side passed pawn scenarios (short, focused sessions) to improve your conversion rate in bullet.
  • Pattern drills: review 4–6 common tactical motifs that occur in your preferred openings (for example, typical back-rank themes and queen-king coordination ideas) and quiz yourself on quick responses.
  • Post-game reflection: after each bullet session, note three decision points where you could have simplified or improved safety (e.g., avoid premature pawn pushes, trade into a clearly favorable endgame, or relocate a loose piece).

Optional resources placeholders

If you’d like, I can tailor visual summaries or provide quick study prompts. For example, we can attach a profile link, opening references, or a short Pgn snippet to review later. Tornikidze



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
;)) 2W / 1L / 1D View
glidzhian_gor 1W / 1L / 0D View
darkness_64 0W / 2L / 0D View
Alex Ivanov 4W / 1L / 0D View
elfangm2 6W / 6L / 0D View
Ehsan GhaemMaghami (IRI) 1W / 2L / 1D View
cr16sd 23W / 2L / 5D View
meandmybirdie 0W / 1L / 0D View
chill_out112 2W / 1L / 0D View
The_Fastest_Hand 0W / 1L / 0D View
Most Played Opponents
cr16sd 23W / 2L / 5D View Games
elfangm2 6W / 6L / 0D View Games
samseviantheonlyrealboss 2W / 7L / 3D View Games
David Anton Guijarro 1W / 8L / 1D View Games
0817chess 4W / 3L / 1D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 2859 2818

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 234W / 194L / 46D 236W / 215L / 31D 93.1

Openings: Most Played

Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Nimzo-Larsen Attack 64 42 18 4 65.6%
Modern 46 18 22 6 39.1%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 42 25 13 4 59.5%
Caro-Kann Defense 19 8 10 1 42.1%
Amar Gambit 13 7 5 1 53.9%
Nimzo-Larsen Attack: Classical Variation 11 7 4 0 63.6%
Scandinavian Defense 10 4 6 0 40.0%
Australian Defense 9 5 4 0 55.6%
King's Indian Attack 8 7 1 0 87.5%
East Indian Defense 8 3 4 1 37.5%
Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Ruy Lopez: Schliemann Defense 40 22 15 3 55.0%
Italian Game: Two Knights Defense 28 15 11 2 53.6%
Caro-Kann Defense 22 7 15 0 31.8%
Amar Gambit 22 10 12 0 45.5%
Barnes Defense 20 11 7 2 55.0%
Ruy Lopez: Morphy Defense, Anderssen Variation 19 11 8 0 57.9%
Sicilian Defense: Alapin Variation 18 10 7 1 55.6%
Sicilian Defense: Closed, Anti-Sveshnikov Variation, Kharlov-Kramnik Line 18 6 8 4 33.3%
King's Indian Defense: Orthodox Variation 16 9 7 0 56.2%
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 16 12 1 3 75.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 11 0
Losing 7 1
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