What is your highest accuracy?


put it in stockfish or any other computer.
So, you make 2 clear mistakes (frankly, blunders, though the chess.com analysis will not label them as such) in the opening and get a completely lost position when you are still in a situation where you can use opening books as a resource, and suddenly play 31 straight engine top moves? All while having a tactics rating of 1000. /smh
You are only kidding yourself.
That aside. To the original poster: The summary rating is a meaningless number. I've had games where I made 2 major blunders, entered a completely lost position, tried to fight on and lost in a long endgame ... and had 96+ CAPS scores. They are trying to show a single metric that describes how the game went, but it has always been poorly implemented.
I can recall clearing 98% but as sockpuppet observes your accuracy has a lot to do with your opponent's play. Some games make the best moves consistently obvious.

I believe my highest accuracy was in a 15+10 game and it was 99.7. I've been getting around 95% on the 15+10 videos I've been recording for my channel. Feel free to check it out:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpRYz_ElTJC-FUq4unehOfg/

Anyone ever get as high as 94.6 with a blunder....LOL

I am going to do some self-analysis.
let's look at my 18 Rapid games over the month of May 2020 with time controls of either 15 | 10 or 30 min (most of which are from USCF Online tourneys on here). My median accuracy for those games is 92.8% which, going by the CAPS chart, would put me around 2200 rapid strength. This includes 3 games where my accuracy was at least 98%.
So overall, my typical playing strength in relatively long games on here in the last month is 2150-2200 ELO (if the CAPS chart is to be trusted) which is good considering that I'm roughly 2100 USCF Standard at the moment and I haven't played in an USCF-rated OTB tournament in the last 7.5 months.