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Player Profile

TrulyHumbledUnderGod

Since 2023 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟
42.9% W 48.0% L 9.0% D
Bullet
473
40W 59L 3D
Blitz
328
594W 646L 127D
Rapid
420
2W 6L 4D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice work — your recent win shows excellent tactical alertness and pawn-play (you created and converted a passed b‑pawn). You’re aggressive, willing to simplify into winning endgames, and you punish opponents’ time trouble. The losses show a few recurring patterns: risky early queen adventures, occasional kingside weaknesses, and time-management/abandon issues. Use the short checklist below as a focused plan for the next session.

Games referenced

What you do well (keep doing this)

  • Creating and racing passed pawns — you turned a b‑pawn into a queen in the win. That is high‑leverage bullet play.
  • Tactical alertness — sharp captures (knight/melee tactics) and winning combinations, even when the queen moves a lot early.
  • Active piece play — you put pieces on aggressive squares and trade down into winning endgames instead of letting counterplay grow.
  • Practical bullet instincts — forcing complications when the opponent is low on time often yields results. Use that selectively.

Patterns to fix (high impact)

  • Avoid unnecessary early queen excursions. Your queen moves early for small gains (e.g., grabbing pawns) but sometimes costs time or allows counter‑tactics. In bullet, only queen‑trips that force advantage are worth it.
  • King safety / weak squares on the kingside. Several games show your kingside pawns/structure creating targets; be cautious about pawn pushes that leave holes.
  • Time management and abandoned games. A number of losses were “abandoned” or ended on the clock — keep an eye on your clock and reduce long think time in quiet positions.
  • Pre‑move discipline. Don’t auto pre‑move into tactics — pre‑moves are powerful but costly when a tactic arrives.

Concrete drills (what to practice this week)

  • Tactics sprint — 15 minutes of high‑quality tactics (forks/pins/x‑ray) daily. Focus on pattern recognition for the motifs you missed in the loss lines.
  • Endgame mini‑routine — 10 minutes a day on king+pawn vs king and basic rook endgames. You won by promoting a pawn — reinforcing promotion conversion will raise your conversion rate.
  • Bullet time training — play sessions of 20 bullet games but force yourself to keep at least 8–10 seconds on the clock after move 15. Practice deciding for moves in 1–3 seconds for quiet positions.
  • Opening pruning — pick 2 main lines (one as White, one as Black) and learn 6–8 moves deep. For you the Scandinavian and Caro‑Kann have good practical results — keep the sharp gambits but have a safe fallback.

Game‑specific notes (actionable moments)

  • Win vs Matthew Guo Diao — excellent: you traded into a winning pawn endgame and marched the b‑pawn. Action: in future similar positions, aim to activate the king earlier to speed the promotion.
  • Loss vs Oleksii Nakonechnyi — the position shows a kingside tactical exchange where your pawns became targets. Action: when you take material on the flank, check for opponent counterplay along open files before simplifying.
  • Loss vs Hikaru Nakamura — material swings and time issues. Action: avoid long queen hunts unless the win is forced; save time for the critical phase when kingside storms and piece activity decide the game.

Session plan — next 60 minutes

  • Warm‑up: 5 minutes easy tactics (pattern recognition).
  • Training: 15 minutes endgame drills (pawn promotion, basic rook endings).
  • Focused play: 20 bullet games. Use one opening as White and one as Black — play only those lines.
  • Review: 20 minutes — pick 3 lost/won games and note 1 improvement per game (time, tactic, opening).

Quick checklist for in‑game decisions

  • Before a queen trip ask: does this win something decisive, or just a tempo/pawn? If not, hold off.
  • If you have under 10 seconds, swap to “practical mode”: play safe, simplify into pawn races or forced lines.
  • Use pre‑moves only when the reply cannot be a tactical shot.
  • When you have a passed pawn, activate the king and remove opposing piece counterplay first.

Motivation & next step

Your long‑term record shows strong handling of offbeat and sharp lines — you’ve got the tactical foundation. Focus short term on clock management and a small, rock‑solid opening set. In two weeks rerun the drills and you should see fewer abandoned/flag losses and cleaner promotions like in your recent win.