Career arcs, repertoires, and the games that mattered. 24 portraits — from the reigning champion in Singapore to the eight-decade-old games that shaped the modern openings. Each portrait closes with deep external references for further study.
The youngest classical world chess champion in history — 18 years old when he took the title in Singapore 2024.
Twelve years atop the rating list. The quiet revolution he started in opening preparation, and the empire he chose to leave behind.
Twenty years atop the rating list, fifteen years world champion, and the player who turned opening preparation into a science.
India's first grandmaster, five-time world champion, and the player who showed that elite chess could be played from Madras as readily as from Moscow.
The Russian world champion who took the title from Kasparov in London 2000 — and proved, with the Berlin Defense
China's first male world chess champion — and the player whose 2023 title victory came at the moment Carlsen chose not to defend.
Ten years world champion before he ever lost the title, and the player who made positional restraint a winning strategy.
Five-time US champion and the most prolific online chess broadcaster ever — the player who showed that streaming and grandmaster chess could coexist.
America's strongest player — twice runner-up at the World Championship, and the most deeply prepared opening theoretician of the engine era.
The Telangana-born grandmaster who in 2024 became the first Indian to cross the 2800 Elo barrier — and reset the ceiling for the country that produced Anand.
The youngest player to break 2800, the Iranian-born grandmaster who took French citizenship in 2021 and entered the world championship picture before…
Russia's strongest current player — twice the world championship challenger, both times unsuccessful, both times after dominating Candidates Tournaments.
The Chinese grandmaster who at fifteen became the youngest player ever to cross 2700, and at twenty-five remains the country's second-strongest active player.
The Chennai-born prodigy who became the youngest international master in history, then a grandmaster at twelve, then a Candidates contender in his teens.
The second world chess champion, holder of the title for twenty-seven years — the longest reign in the history of the championship.
The Cuban world champion whose endgame technique became the benchmark for clarity in chess. He lost fewer games than any champion before or since.
The fourth world champion — a calculating attacker whose tactical depth set the standard for the modern combinative style.
The father of the Soviet chess school — world champion in three non-consecutive reigns, and the mentor of Kasparov, Karpov, and Kramnik.
The seventh world champion — a positional virtuoso whose harmony of pieces was the model the next two generations studied.
The ninth world chess champion — the Armenian master of prophylaxis, whose positions opponents found suffocating in ways they could not name.
The Soviet defector who twice challenged Karpov for the world title — and the longest-active world-class player in the modern era.
The Magician from Riga — the eighth world champion, whose unsound sacrifices and breakneck calculation gave attacking chess its modern grammar.
The tenth world champion, whose 1972 Reykjavík match with Bobby Fischer brought chess into global politics — and out of it again.
The first American world champion — a singular force who took the title in 1972 and never defended it. His shadow over the modern game has not lifted.