Magnus Carlsen won the seven-round rapid round-robin with 4.5 points, qualifying for the semifinals of the FIDE Freestyle Chess World Championship alongside Vincent Keymer, Fabiano Caruana, and Nodirbek Abdusattorov. The event, held in Weissenhaus, Germany, featured intense competition that remained undecided until the final round. The top four advance to knockout stages for a chance at the 2026 world title and $100,000 prize.
The FIDE Freestyle Chess World Championship began with a single-day round-robin tournament on Friday in Weissenhaus, Northern Germany. This rapid event, consisting of seven rounds with 10-minute games and a five-second increment, used a new starting position each round, characteristic of Freestyle Chess, formerly known as Chess960.
Magnus Carlsen, the favorite after his 2025 Freestyle Grand Slam victory in South Africa, started strongly with two draws and three wins in the first five rounds, securing qualification early. He finished with 4.5 points out of seven. Keymer, Caruana, and Abdusattorov each scored 4 points. Hans Niemann tallied 3.5, Arjun Erigaisi 3, and Javokhir Sindarov and Levon Aronian 2 points.
Qualification stayed open until the end, with a potential four-way tie on 4 points possible. Carlsen drew with Niemann in round one and defeated Sindarov in round two via an extraordinary checkmate in a rook endgame after Sindarov's 49…b4?? blunder, leading to 50.g8=Q! and resignation.
Erigaisi, the world number five in classical chess, beat Carlsen decisively in round six, the only loss for the Norwegian. Keymer qualified by beating Caruana in round six, where Caruana missed a draw with 29…Rdxe5?? In the final round, Caruana defeated Erigaisi to secure his spot, while Abdusattorov drew with Carlsen, enough for qualification after his win over Sindarov.
Aronian described his performance as “a day of blundering,” attributing it to two months without play. Niemann, a wildcard, missed semifinals after drawing Aronian in the last round.
Carlsen commented ahead of the event: “I like the fact that it’s cut-throat and it’s not going to be easy to come through for anybody.” A Freestyle world title remains one of few trophies absent from his collection.
The championship, with a $300,000 prize fund, continues with semifinals on Saturday and the final on Sunday. Top three finishers qualify for the 2027 cycle. An exhibition match between Alexandra Kosteniuk and Bibisara Assaubayeva begins Saturday for Women's qualification.
The event marks FIDE's cooperation with Freestyle Chess, last held in 2022 when Hikaru Nakamura won but chose not to defend.