All that means is that you've had a bad run of results lately and your rating has dipped below where it has historically been. You can see this in your rating graph. If you play more games, your rating should return to its usual level
We will know in about two weeks, provided I have time to play
So, finally got time to play, and yeah, raising the ratings of my opponents seems to help my rating climb considerably. While it is perhaps more evidence of a rating settling point issue inherent to rating calculations on chess.com and pertinant to this topic, I also wonder if there has ever been any attempt to standardize ratings. Is a 1200 FIDE today the same as a 1200 FIDE 20 years ago if there is nothing to stop rating deflation? Others seem to comment that 1200 on chess.com isn't quite the same as 1200 on lichess, just because the player pools are different.
I'd say that it's slightly inaccurate until you reach a rating where your odds of winning are 50 50. If you're in a level where the odds are imbalanced, you're either better or inadequate for that rating. The beauty of it is, overtime, the more games you play, the more likelihood that you'll reach a more accurate rating. It's a self correcting system that only needs to focus on keeping the games fair and that's exactly what they're trying to do.
When it comes to standardizing ratings, FIDE doesn't necessarily need to align/standardize the rating system for itself, chess.com, and lichess. It has no real responsibility or need to do that. It could stay the way it is where people's ratings in FIDE, chess.com, and lichess are segregated. It's more straightforward that way to me. These are completely different chess environments offering very different experiences so it makes sense that the ratings from these stay individual from each other.
Whole point of my post is that, no, ratings will not converge in a self-correcting manner. they will converge at different points based on whether your opponents are rated higher than you or not.
Why is everyone misinterpreting my comment when I said that ratings are "self correcting"? I clarified it in a later comment but yeah. This isn't what I was referring to when I said that the rating system is self correcting.
What I was trying to argue is that the more games you play, the more you'll reach a more accurate rating.
No. Not even after 10 thousand games. This isn't coin flipping. I'm sorry but you don't know what you are talking about.