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Freestyle-WM im Februar in Weissenhaus

Freestyle und die FIDE teilen mit:

2025-01-07

The first official FIDE Freestyle Chess World Championship to be hosted in Weissenhaus
 

The International Chess Federation (FIDE) and Freestyle Chess Operations GmbH have agreed to stage the first official FIDE Freestyle Chess World Championship in Weissenhaus, Germany, from February 13–15, 2026. The event is governed by FIDE in collaboration with Freestyle Chess.

On January 7, 2026, FIDE and Freestyle Chess signed a cooperation agreement, giving the green light to the first joint World Championship. This is the first time that the World Championship title in this format is awarded under a joint framework between FIDE and a private organiser. As confirmed by the Parties, “no event may be designated as an official ‘World Chess Championship’ in any format, including Freestyle Chess, without the prior written consent of FIDE”.

Freestyle Chess is also known as Chess960 or FIDE Fischer Random Chess as per the FIDE Charter.

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The FIDE Freestyle Chess World Championship will be a continuation of FIDE’s previous events in the Fischer Random format (previously held in 2019 and 2022) and will feature eight players. Six players have qualified based on their results during the 2025 Freestyle Chess Grand Slam Tour: Magnus Carlsen, Levon Aronian, Fabiano Caruana, Vincent Keymer, Arjun Erigaisi, and Javokhir Sindarov.

Two additional participants will be selected separately, one by FIDE and one by Freestyle Chess. Freestyle Chess has already nominated Hans Niemann, due to his outstanding performance in the Freestyle Chess Grand Slam in Las Vegas. FIDE will hold an Online Qualification Tournament on Chess.com as early as January 14 and 15 to determine the eighth player.

A Women’s Exhibition Match between two of the best women will be held in parallel in Weissenhaus. Additionally, the Parties have agreed to the launch of the inaugural FIDE Women’s Freestyle Chess Championship in late 2026. The event will feature a $50,000 prize fund, financed from the payment made by Freestyle Chess under the current agreement with FIDE.

“This World Championship and signed cooperation agreement bring FIDE and Freestyle Chess together within a clear and transparent sporting framework,” said Arkady Dvorkovich, President of FIDE. “It is important that elite competition in this format is governed under established international standards administered by FIDE as the sole governing body of world chess.”

“Our aim from the outset was to build a serious competitive structure, not isolated events,” said Jan Henric Buettner, CEO of Freestyle Chess. “After completing our first Grand Slam season, a World Championship in cooperation with FIDE is the logical next step – a defined title, a fixed venue, and a clear competitive peak.”

The FIDE Freestyle Chess World Championship 2026 follows the conclusion of the Freestyle Chess Grand Slam Tour 2025, which recently crowned Freestyle Chess co-founder Magnus Carlsen as its first overall champion at the season final in South Africa. The inaugural Grand Slam Tour established Freestyle Chess as a structured, season-long elite circuit.

Set on Germany’s Baltic Sea coast, Weissenhaus has already established itself as a distinctive venue for elite chess events. The historic estate offers seclusion, architectural character, and controlled playing conditions, providing a focused environment for top-level competition and broadcast production.

Format and Schedule

Friday, February 13: The tournament opens with a rapid round-robin stage, following the format used in the Freestyle Chess Grand Slam events. All eight players face each other once with a time control of 10 minutes plus 5-second increment. The top four players advance to the semifinals, while the remaining players move into placement matches.

Saturday, February 14: The knockout stage begins with the semifinals and placement matches, played with a time control of 25 minutes plus 10-second increment. The semifinals will be played as four-game matches.

Sunday, February 15: The final, played over four games, and the placement matches use the same 25 minutes plus 10-second increment. In the final, the FIDE Freestyle Chess World Champion is determined.

All final places from first to eighth will be decided over the board. The total prize fund is $300,000, with $100,000 awarded to the FIDE Freestyle Chess World Champion.

Arrivals are scheduled for February 11, with February 12 reserved as a media and content day. The event concludes on Sunday, February 15, followed by departures on February 16.

Freestyle-Schach-WM 2026: Ein Deal mit offener Rechnung

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Quelle: Der Standard – Kolumne „Vitouchs Schacheck“ von Anatol Vitouch, 11. Jänner 2026 (Abo)

Die Kolumne ordnet die überraschende Einigung zwischen der FIDE und dem deutschen Investor Jan Henric Buettner ein. Ergebnis: Die erste offizielle Freestyle-Schach-WM seit 2022 findet vom 13. bis 15. Februar 2026 auf Gut Weißenhaus statt – mit Magnus Carlsen als Teilnehmer.

Vitouch zeichnet die Vorgeschichte als offenen Machtkampf. Buettner hatte Freestyle Chess – das frühere Fischer Random – mit hohen Preisfonds und prominenter Besetzung aufgebaut und seine Serie als Weltmeisterschaft vermarkten wollen. Die FIDE widersetzte sich, es kam zum öffentlichen Streit, eskaliert durch das „Jeans-Gate“ bei der Rapid-WM 2024. Die Freestyle Grand Slam Tour 2025 lief schließlich ohne WM-Titel, aber mit vier Millionen Euro Preisgeld – sportlich dominiert von Carlsen.

Die jetzige Einigung wirkt für Vitouch pragmatisch, aber nicht sauber. Die FIDE erhält eine WM, ohne selbst investieren zu müssen. Buettner bekommt den Titel, zahlt diesmal jedoch deutlich weniger: 300.000 Dollar Preisfonds. Ob die Grand-Slam-Tour 2026 überhaupt noch stattfindet, bleibt offen.

Kritik kommt vom amtierenden Freestyle-Weltmeister Hikaru Nakamura, der seine Teilnahme absagt. Er bemängelt die extrem kurzfristige Organisation, den reduzierten Preisfonds und die Zusammenarbeit mit der FIDE. Brisant: Sieben der acht Startplätze stammen aus Buettners privater Tour, der letzte wird hastig in einem Online-Qualifikationsturnier vergeben – genau der Punkt, den die FIDE zuvor als unzulässig kritisiert hatte.

Vitouch sieht darin keinen sauberen Neuanfang, sondern einen Zweckkompromiss. Sportlich könnte Carlsen profitieren, zumal die WM als Rapidturnier gespielt wird. Politisch bleibt ein schaler Beigeschmack. Das Kapitel Freestyle ist damit nicht befriedet, sondern nur vertagt.

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