First movement was fun to listen to specially when it goes entirely off the rails, like in measure 38-39 and the section afterwards with the tremolo. It's jarring enough that it makes the stuff that comes after that seem like compensation. Then there's measure 66 that's just ????, maybe you can figure out a better voicing for this that doesn't feel so harsh? All in all, reminds me of the stuff Mozart did that was really awkward and he would spend a good amount of time trying to compensate by making the most cookie-cutter filler possible to make people forget he just suddenly sprung some augmented chord or whatever out of nowhere.
The second movement is a little disappointing after hearing the first. It's a little more on the Beethoven-Early romantic side than the first movement, specially with the rubato segments and the little subdivisions. But yeah, it's competent. Also, maybe think about using those 5ths a little more sparingly in the left hand, since they do sound kind of harsh, specially noticeable in the beginning (m 5-7.)
The third movement also has it's moment of going off the rails, which is the modulation that happens in measure 100 onwards, which I think is actually the highlight. You actually repeat it later (m. 169), since, y'know, it's hella cool. It's extremely outside of the style to do that kind of jarring change (Amaj, Dmin, Gmin7(!), Cmaj, Fmin(!?) and so on) but just like the change in the first movement I think it gives it a lot more character than the rather generic, though competent, beginning. Speaking of that section, do please add safety accidentals, specially in like measure 178 the B there is not flat, but I'm 99.9% sure that people will play that flat by accident on the first few readings.
I like the way you transition into the reprise too and it's a little comical coming from something so dramatic. As for the ending itself, I want to play the last chord once more at the end. Or twice more. It just ends too abruptly in my opinion, and it would go with the stop-and-go movement of the ending cadence.
It's like it suddenly