A computer can refute these moves and it may not work against some of the Super high level players in here so this may be an example of 1m bullet games teaching bad habits. However, I usually play 1m games vs players just under 1300 and I'm very comfortable making these moves. I wanted to post it because the aggression brought about lots of interesting options. Before my opponent moved pawn to F6, I had some other ideas for how to slice into king side without necessarily knowing all the specifics of my opponent's possible counterplay at the time but they could be worked out... ideas like making room for bishop sacrifices to open up the king side and/or make room for my last rook to get involved or possibly even something like Qh8, Be3 with the idea of Bd4 then sacking the rook AND queen on H8 to remove the opponent's king side fianchettoed bishop and creating a mating net after my last rook delivers h1 check and if I can manage the rook h8 mate as long as my own bishop (or another peice) can activate to protect h8. Opponent can play c5 so on hindsight d pawn takes c6 followed by knight d5 bringing in more pieces and prior to that opponent's knight on G4 can take bishop on e3 so playing pawn f3 to remove him might be necessary and by kicking out the knight it might open up things on the king side.
Anyways, I thought the lack of castling and super aggressive tactics including moving king when opponent only had one attacker and was too slow to get after it
[Site "Chess.com iPhone"]
[Date "07/13/2018 12:54AM"]
[White "secretbonus (1277)"]
[Black "Allerih (1268)"]
1.e4 b6 2.d4 Bb7 3.d5 g6 4.c4 Bg7 5.Nc3 Nf6 6.Nf3 O-O 7.Bd3 h5 8.h3 d6 9.g4 hxg4 10.hxg4 Nxg4 11.Ke2 Qd7 12.Ng5 c6 13.Rh7 f6 14.Rxg7+ Kxg7 15.Ne6+ Kf7 16.Qh1 Ke8 17.e5 dxe5 18.Bxg6+ Rf7 19.Qh8# {secretbonus wins by Checkmate}