D Gukesh is the youngest undisputed World Chess Champion in history. He won the title in 2024 at the age of 18 after defeating Ding Liren in the World Championship match.
Born on 29 May 2006 in Chennai, India, Gukesh became a grandmaster at just 12 years old and quickly rose through the elite ranks of world chess.
Select a game and replay it move by move on the interactive board. You can step through the moves and study how Gukesh builds pressure and converts advantages.
What to watch: Gukesh often thrives in complex middlegames where calculation and initiative matter. In several of these games he gradually increases pressure before converting the advantage.
Since becoming world champion, Gukesh has continued to compete regularly in elite tournaments. Like many world champions early in their reign, his results have varied as he adjusts to the intense competition and constant preparation from rivals.
Even so, his victories over elite players and his ability to handle complicated positions remain a defining strength of his play.
D Gukesh was born on 29 May 2006 and is currently 19 years old. His age matters because he became world champion at an unusually young stage of an elite chess career. Use the quick facts panel and replay viewer together to connect his age with the level of games he was already winning.
Gukesh's full name is Dommaraju Gukesh, and he is often listed in events as D Gukesh or Gukesh D. That naming variation explains why rating lists, broadcasts, and search queries often use slightly different versions of his name. Compare the player naming across the replay games on this page to recognise those common event-format variations.
D Gukesh was born in Chennai, India, and he represents India in international chess. Chennai has long been one of the strongest chess centres in India, which helps explain why several elite Indian players emerged from the same wider environment. Use the quick facts section first, then replay the featured games to see how that background developed into world-class results.
Gukesh was born in Chennai and comes from a Telugu family background while growing up in Tamil Nadu. That is why both Telugu-background and Tamil Nadu-related searches appear around his profile. Use the background answers on this page as a quick check, then move into the games section to focus on his chess rather than identity confusion.
Gukesh started playing chess when he was seven years old. Starting young matters in modern elite chess because calculation, opening memory, and competitive experience compound over many years. Use the career highlights section with the replay board to trace how early development led to top-level performances.
Gukesh moved away from a normal school path so he could focus more seriously on chess while continuing his education through flexible arrangements. That kind of decision is common among elite junior players once international travel and preparation become demanding. Read the background and career answers together, then use the replay viewer to see the practical level that justified that commitment.
Gukesh became a grandmaster in January 2019 at the age of 12 years and 7 months. Reaching the grandmaster title that early is a major marker because it places a player on a rare accelerated path toward elite status. Use the quick facts panel for the milestone, then replay the games here to see how quickly his chess matured after that point.
Gukesh became the youngest undisputed World Chess Champion in history when he won the title in 2024. The word undisputed matters because world title history includes split-title eras that create confusion in simple age comparisons. Read the quick facts and career highlights together, then replay the World Championship games on this page to study the title run directly.
Gukesh defeated Ding Liren to become World Chess Champion in 2024. That match mattered because Ding was the reigning champion, so the win transferred the classical crown in the standard world title format. Replay the Ding–Gukesh championship games on this page to see the match tension rather than just reading the result.
Gukesh became world champion in December 2024 after winning the World Chess Championship match against Ding Liren. The exact timing matters because many searches mix up the Candidates victory with the actual title win later that year. Use the career highlights for the milestone order, then replay the championship examples to place the title in context.
Gukesh was 18 years old when he became World Chess Champion in 2024. That age is remarkable because world title victories normally come much later, after years of elite match and tournament experience. Use the quick facts box for the headline fact, then replay the championship games here to connect the age milestone with the quality of play.
Gukesh's main achievements include becoming a grandmaster at 12, winning the 2024 Candidates Tournament, helping India to Olympiad success, and becoming World Chess Champion in 2024. Those milestones show a fast progression from prodigy to elite contender to champion rather than a single isolated breakthrough. Use the career highlights section as the summary, then explore the replay games to see those achievements expressed over the board.
Gukesh's career highlights include his early grandmaster title, major Olympiad performances, Candidates victory, and world championship success. Those landmarks matter because they show strength across both tournament play and match play, which demand different psychological skills. Use the career highlights list as your overview, then replay the featured wins to study how those landmarks were earned.
Gukesh's peak classical FIDE rating is 2794. Crossing the high-2700s is significant because that rating band is where world-championship-level contenders normally live. Use the quick facts panel for the number, then replay the elite games on this page to see the kind of positions that support that rating strength.
Gukesh's current rating changes over time with each official FIDE list and major event. That is why searches for his current rating can differ from pages that quote a peak rating or an older monthly list. Use this page for the stable career context and replay material, then treat the current-rating question as a moving snapshot rather than a permanent biography fact.
Gukesh's Elo rating refers to his official FIDE rating in standard, rapid, or blitz formats depending on the context. Elo is not a nickname for one fixed number, so a search result can look inconsistent when it mixes time controls or different dates. Use the peak-rating answer here as the main reference point, then use the replay games to understand the playing strength behind the number.
Gukesh's world ranking changes over time because rankings move with every published FIDE list and major result. Ranking and rating are related but not identical, since a player can gain or lose places even with a small rating shift if rivals also move. Use the profile answers here for stable milestones, then use the replay section to focus on enduring playing quality rather than list movement alone.
No player has reached a 3000 classical FIDE rating. That number is often discussed as a symbolic barrier, but even the highest-rated players in history have remained below it. Use the rating answers on this page to place Gukesh's peak in realistic elite context, then replay his games to see how close world-class chess already is to practical perfection in many positions.
Gukesh's playing style is aggressive, concrete, and highly calculation-driven, especially in complex middlegames. He often thrives when positions demand exact move-by-move accuracy rather than only general strategic comfort. Use the replay viewer on this page to watch how he increases pressure in sharp positions and converts when the moment becomes critical.
Gukesh's main strengths are deep calculation, fighting spirit, resilience, and confidence in difficult positions. Those strengths matter because elite games are often decided by who handles unstable positions without drifting into passive play. Replay the featured games here to see those strengths in action instead of treating them as abstract labels.
Gukesh is best described as a complete player with a strong tactical core rather than as only a tactical or only a positional specialist. Modern elite chess punishes one-dimensional play, so the strongest players combine calculation with strategic judgment. Use the replay selector to compare his wins against Carlsen, Ding, and Caruana and notice how the balance changes from game to game.
Gukesh is so strong in complex positions because his calculation remains dangerous even when the position becomes messy and decision-heavy. In elite chess, one accurate sequence in a tense middlegame can swing the evaluation dramatically and decide the entire game. Replay the sharper examples on this page to study how he keeps asking difficult practical questions move after move.
Yes, Gukesh often plays aggressively when the position justifies active and forcing chess. His aggression is usually rooted in concrete calculation rather than random attack, which is why it holds up well against elite opposition. Use the interactive replays here to see how his attacking chances are usually built from pressure and piece activity first.
Yes, Gukesh has beaten Magnus Carlsen in elite competition. A win over Carlsen matters because Carlsen has been the defining benchmark of the era, so any victory over him draws outsized attention. Replay the Carlsen game on this page to see the kind of initiative and precision required to beat him.
Gukesh is not generally judged to have surpassed Magnus Carlsen's overall career strength or dominance yet. Carlsen's authority comes from a much longer body of elite results across formats and many years at or near number one. Use this page to compare Gukesh's direct games and title achievements without flattening the larger historical gap into a simple yes-or-no slogan.
Gukesh and Praggnanandhaa are both elite Indian stars, but calling one definitively better depends on the date, format, and metric being used. Players can trade practical superiority across classical, rapid, blitz, and tournament form, so blanket claims usually oversimplify the comparison. Use this page to study Gukesh on his own terms through his replay games and career milestones rather than forcing a shallow rivalry frame.
Gukesh is one of the strongest players in the world and he is the reigning World Chess Champion, but best-in-the-world debates depend on whether you mean title, rating, form, or all-time strength. That distinction matters because world champion and world number one are not always the same thing at the same moment. Use the profile answers and replay section here to separate confirmed achievements from broader debate language.
Who is better between Gukesh and Hikaru depends on the format and the standard you are using. Hikaru Nakamura has extraordinary rapid and blitz credentials, while Gukesh's rise has been especially important in classical world championship chess. Use this page to evaluate Gukesh through his championship path and elite replays instead of collapsing two different strengths into one headline answer.
There is no verified public IQ score for D Gukesh. Search interest around chess-player IQ is common, but elite chess strength is measured far more reliably through results, ratings, calculation, and decision-making under pressure. Use the replay viewer here to study his actual chess intelligence in action rather than relying on unsupported IQ claims.
No, there is no official public IQ score for Gukesh that has been established by a trusted chess or governing source. This is a classic misconception query because viral posts and fan pages often turn speculation into fake certainty. Use the factual profile and replay material on this page to stay anchored in real achievements instead of internet myth-making.
What is publicly known is that Gukesh adjusted his education path to support a serious professional chess career. That is typical for elite prodigies whose travel, training, and tournament schedules become too demanding for a normal routine. Read the background answers for the biography context, then use the game replays to see the professional level that followed from that commitment.
Gukesh's FIDE profile shows his official ratings, federation details, and rating history across recognised formats. FIDE profile searches are usually verification searches, where people want the official record rather than a paraphrased biography page. Use this page for the quick understanding and game study layer, then treat the profile concept as the official database side of the same story.
Gukesh has had mixed results after becoming world champion, which is normal for a new champion facing intense preparation from elite rivals. Early title reigns often involve a difficult adjustment period because every opponent arrives exceptionally well prepared. Read the recent form section on this page, then replay the featured games to keep short-term fluctuations in proportion to his larger strength.
Yes, Gukesh is still at an age where further improvement is realistic even after already reaching the top. Chess growth at that level is often less about simple tactics and more about opening depth, match strategy, and practical decision quality against elite opposition. Use the replays on this page to compare different phases of his development and notice how his handling of pressure evolves.
So many people are searching for Gukesh because becoming world champion at a very young age pushed him from chess interest into mainstream sporting attention. Sudden search spikes often happen when a player crosses from specialist fame into broader public recognition. Use this page as a compact profile-and-replay hub so the attention leads into actual understanding of his chess.