Look at the trend before the isolated score. Mastery that rises slowly but steadily is often healthier than a spike after one good session. Openings settle through repetition, not one-off performance.

The dashboard lets you compare several signals: average score, sessions, errors, duration, trained positions or resolved weak moves. No single metric tells the whole story, but together they show where your effort will matter most.

Mastery and errors

If mastery is low but sessions are rare, the issue is probably volume. If sessions are frequent but errors stay concentrated on the same moves, the issue is more likely understanding or move order.

  • Low mastery + few sessions: replay the line.
  • Low mastery + many errors: simplify or analyse.
  • High mastery + long pause: do a quick review.
Key idea

The right question is not “is my score good?”, but “what decision does this score give me for the next session?”.

Activity calendar

The calendar helps you spot rhythm breaks. An empty week often explains more than a bad score. By selecting a day, you can review the sessions done and understand what was actually trained.

Use it as a practice journal. If you see a long series of very short sessions, keep that format if it helps consistency. If you see long blocks followed by silence, reduce the size of future sessions.

Choose the next action

Finish reading the stats with one action: restart a weak opening, clean a branch, solve a few puzzles or analyse a critical position. Good statistics turn vague concern into a clear next step.