On move 11, can't black take your bishop?
What's your opinion of this game?
I think you should try to analyze the game by yourself : I saw three mistakes : you hang a piece, you don't take a piece en prise, and you miss a strong one-mover winning a piece.
Can you locate them ? 
I didn't get a chance to view the entire game yet; but, I did jot down some notes on move #s 15 & 17:
On white's move #15, a stronger move (I think) would have been Bxe6. This would've placed black's c8 bishop in prise. And since black can't castle short, it seems that he would be forced to play Be7 to prevent discovered check.
On white's move #17, I believe that Rxe6+ would have forced black to play either Be7 or Kf7. I leaning more toward black playing Be7 because forcing the king on the run will cause black to loose so much tempo in the game...especially with other power pieces closing in. The b5 bishop was never in any immediate danger. Moving the pawn to a4 would be considered a wasted move. It's too safe and ineffective at this point.
I'll revisit this game and study further. Thanks for sharing. Cheers!!!
~The Doctor
@hicetnunc : I can't spot those 3 mistakes, please could you show them to me
at move 11 black can win a piece. at move 18 white can win a queen by Rxe6+, Kf7 (if Be7 then just take it and he have to take your rook with his queen), Ng5+, Kg8 and now Nf6+ forcing Qxf6.
There are too many mistakes to write them all down. My favorite part is when black puts his knight on h6(this alone makes no sense) then f5 and the back to h6, that horse maneuver deserves this many questions marks ?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????
Hilarious, dont know if this gane is a joke (I hope it is).
This is final match I won up to now, I think I played it well. but did I make any mistakes?any opinion on the way I played