Indian chess player Deboushnik De has shared insights into his remarkable journey from a FIDE rating of 1927 in January 2025 to 2430 by January 2026, earning two International Master norms along the way. Coming from Assam in North East India, where resources are limited, De emphasizes the role of mindset, strategic planning, and persistence in overcoming setbacks. His story highlights how trusting the process led to breakthroughs in European tournaments.
Deboushnik De's ascent in the chess world began with a focus on execution rather than talent. In January 2025, rated at 1927, he competed in the Goa GM Open, boosting his rating to 2038 and building confidence for tougher challenges ahead.
His first European trip in April-May 2025 targeted high-level opens: the Reykjavík Open, Grenke Open, and Sardinia Open. Facing grandmasters and international masters, De gained 234 rating points, reaching 2272. He credits this period with proving he belonged at that level, followed by intensive training on weaknesses, openings, calculation, and decision-making with coaches GMs Alexander Moiseenko and Michael Roiz.
November 2025 brought a second trip, starting with a round-robin in Serbia and a team event. Overwhelmed by norm calculations—'How many wins do I need for a norm? Against whom should I push?'—De misplayed positions, suffered time trouble, and lost 38 points. A pivotal reset came through talks with coaches, family, and friends, who urged him to 'completely forget about norms and ratings' and 'focus only on the position in front of me.'
This mindset shift shone in Bosnia's Brčko 2025 IM tournaments. In IM1, he finished third with 7.5/9, remaining unbeaten. In IM2, he scored 7/9 unbeaten. 'Ironically, the moment I stopped chasing success, success followed!' De notes. He handled norm pressure by treating games normally and accepting nervousness.
De describes his progress as 'delayed success,' with improvements in converting positions aligning with better mindset. Memorable games include a precise attack against Advaitt Srikant Koduri in the Slav Defence and steady outplay of Apaar Saxena using the Anti-Berlin system.
From Assam, De acknowledges challenges but affirms, 'despite all challenges, I stayed focused on my chess and, in the end, it paid off!' With two norms and 2430 Elo, he views this as a checkpoint, stressing, 'Progress in chess is not linear, but consistency always gets rewarded.'