FIDE and World Chess Agree to Test a First Over-the-Board Official Rating, Earned Online

For the first time in the history of chess, online play can lead to an official FIDE rating. Lausanne & London – June 23, 2026 – FIDE and World Chess today announced they have agreed to work toward the First Rating Experiment – a first-of-its-kind program that would let players earn their first official over-the-board FIDE blitz and rapid rating through online play. Today, around 500,000 players hold an official FIDE OTB rating. This program is designed to open that to millions more. For players who have never had access to rated over-the-board chess, it could lead to a professional chess career. “This is how FIDE grows the game responsibly,” said FIDE President Arkady Dvorkovich. “Transparent, controlled, and built with the community. We’ve agreed on a framework that puts the integrity of the rating system first – and opens it to players who have never had a way in.” “A FIDE rating opens doors to a professional chess career for those who want it. Some players who want one have never had a way in. This program is designed to change that,” said Ilya Merenzon, CEO of World Chess. “We’ve agreed on the framework. Now we’re doing the work properly – with FIDE, and with the chess community.” The two parties have agreed in principle and are now working toward a final agreement. Today’s announcement invites the chess community to engage with and shape the program before anything is finalized. The program, if confirmed, would run for two years – with the possibility of extension – on worldchess.com, the official FIDE online platform, in rapid and blitz, under full FIDE supervision. How it works To qualify for rating conversion, a player would need to build a real body of online rated play – including a minimum number of games in online rated tournaments, not just casual games. Once eligible, their results go through fair-play checks. If those pass, a rating is issued using a carefully designed coefficient.  That coefficient is the technical heart of the program. It is calculated to ensure that a rating earned online reflects the same standard of play as one earned over the board – that an online result and an OTB result at the same level mean the same thing. The coefficient is set by specialists, recalibrated every six months against large player cohorts, and approved by FIDE. The rating has a fixed ceiling, currently proposed at 1,800. Above it, ratings are earned over the board, as always. Players will be able to convert their rating to OTB once a calendar year, subject to community and professional input. Fair play Every qualifying game is screened by layered detection built for this program. Results in doubt are held and reviewed by a dedicated Anti-Cheating Officer, with a formal appeals process available to any player. The system has been independently reviewed by external experts and will undergo further certification. Every player verifies their identity before qualifying. Community review The technical design – the coefficient methodology, the qualifying standard, the rating ceiling, the appeals route – is open for review and discussion before anything is finalised. This is a genuine conversation, not a formality. Players, coaches, federations, and experts are invited to engage with the detail, raise concerns, and help shape the final rules. FIDE and World Chess aim to finalize and launch the program in July, subject to further community discussion and professional input.  We invite the chess community to submit feedback on the community page, https://worldchess.com/convert-online-rating-to-otb. About World Chess: World Chess plc (LSE: CHSS) is a London-listed chess company and an official commercial partner of the International Chess Federation (FIDE). It develops and operates worldchess.com, a platform with over one million users; produces the World Chess Show, broadcast in more than 50 markets; and organizes major chess events. Across platform, broadcast, and live play, World Chess connects players to FIDE-recognized ratings, titles, and competition – bringing official chess to a global audience.

Viktor Gažík and Zuzana Hagarová crowned Slovak champions

GM Viktor Gažík and IM Zuzana Hagarová are the newly crowned Slovak chess champions. The 2026 edition of the Slovak national championship, held in the Open and Women sections, took place in Bratislava from 13 to 21 June. Both competitions were 10-player round-robins with classical time control. The open event developed into a tight race between defending champion Gažík and GM Peter Michalík. The pair shared the lead until Round 6, where their paths diverged. Gažík scored two consecutive victories and pulled away as Michalík managed only two draws. Despite losing in the penultimate round to IM Vladimír Bochnička, Gažík Gažík bounced back to defeat GM Filip Haring in the final round. Totaling 7/9 he successfully defended his title. The runner-up Michalík finished a full point behind the champion, while GM Juraj Druska completed the podium with 5.5/9. Final standings – Open The women’s event proved to be even more exciting and came down to the wire. As tournament fate would have it, the joint leaders – Zuzana Hagarová and WIM Svetlana Sučikova (both on 6.5/8) – clashed in the final round. Hagarová pulled off a crucial victory and claimed the title. Sučikova settled for the silver medal, while WFM Monika Rojíčková took bronze with 5.5/9. Final standings – Women Photos: Slovenský šachový zväz Official website: https://www.msr2026.chess.sk/index.html