ChessWorld.net, founded in 2000, is an online chess site. Play relaxed, friendly correspondence-style chess โ with online daily, turn-based games โ at your own pace.
โ๏ธ The Dictionary of Tournament Chess: Rules, Formats & Ratings
Competitive chess operates on a strict set of rules and jargon that differs significantly from casual play. If you plan to compete, you need to speak the language of the tournament hall. This dictionary explains the essential conceptsโfrom "Swiss System" pairings to "Touch Move" rules and "Tiebreaks." Use this guide to navigate your first tournament with confidence and avoid technical forfeits.
Competitive chess has a language entirely different from casual play. If you want to play in tournaments (online or Over-the-Board), you need to understand how pairings work, how to read the clock rules, and what to do if a dispute arises.
๐ Arena insight: Tournament chess is a different beast from online blitz. The rules are stricter and the pressure is higher. Master the essential skills to compete with confidence in the real world.
One strong player (Master) plays against many opponents at once, moving from board to board.
Quad Club
A mini Round Robin tournament with exactly 4 players of similar rating. You play 3 games.
2. Scoring & Tiebreaks
Bye Scoring
Full-Point Bye: Given when there is an odd number of players (you have no opponent, you get 1 point free).
Half-Point Bye: A requested break. You ask to skip a round and get 0.5 points (usually limited to early rounds).
A method to break ties. It adds up the scores of all your opponents. If your opponents scored higher, your wins are worth "more" because you faced tougher competition.
A temporary rating calculated based only on your performance in a specific tournament. You can be rated 1500 but have a TPR of 2200 if you beat Grandmasters.
Armageddon Tiebreak
A sudden-death game to decide a winner. White gets more time (e.g., 5 mins) than Black (e.g., 4 mins), but Black has "draw odds"โif the game is drawn, Black wins the match.