This is a feature suggestion. Please give me your feedback and help to shape it out (in case you like the idea).
There are many reasons why people may choose to play a casual game rather than a rated one. For instance, in classical games, I feel like I'm much less likely to play against a cheater when it's a casual game.
However, the disadvantage of casual games is that we don't get any grasp on our playing performance. What I suggest then is to calculate a casual rating for all players, but leave it private. That means it won't be shown in the player's public profile. Only the player himself should be able to see his casual ratings.
There are many possible ways to display those casual ratings. One idea is to use separate web links, by appending "/casual" to the current links we use. For instance:
Your rated classical performance: lichess.org /@/<yourname>/perf/classical
Your casual classical performance: lichess.org /@/<yourname>/perf/classical/casual
And if you try to access the casual rating of any other player, you get redirected to the player's rated rating page. How about that?
There are many reasons why people may choose to play a casual game rather than a rated one. For instance, in classical games, I feel like I'm much less likely to play against a cheater when it's a casual game.
However, the disadvantage of casual games is that we don't get any grasp on our playing performance. What I suggest then is to calculate a casual rating for all players, but leave it private. That means it won't be shown in the player's public profile. Only the player himself should be able to see his casual ratings.
There are many possible ways to display those casual ratings. One idea is to use separate web links, by appending "/casual" to the current links we use. For instance:
Your rated classical performance: lichess.org /@/<yourname>/perf/classical
Your casual classical performance: lichess.org /@/<yourname>/perf/classical/casual
And if you try to access the casual rating of any other player, you get redirected to the player's rated rating page. How about that?