Blitz authority
She won the Women’s World Blitz Championship in 2021, 2022 and 2025.
Three-time Women’s World Blitz Champion
Bibisara Assaubayeva is a Kazakhstani International Master, three-time Women’s World Blitz Champion and 2026 Women’s Candidates participant. Replay 14 supplied wins spanning her 2016 world youth title run, Candidates victories and elite rapid success.
Blitz authority
She won the Women’s World Blitz Championship in 2021, 2022 and 2025.
Youth champion
She won nine supplied games during her 2016 World Under-12 Girls title run.
Candidates strength
Her 2026 Candidates wins over Zhu Jiner and Kateryna Lagno demonstrate elite classical strength.
Replay path
The collection contains wins only, so every replay ends in one of her successful tactical or technical patterns.
Assaubayeva–Mkrtchyan: complete the mating net
Sequence: 35.Rf7+ Ke8 36.Re1+ Kd8 37.Bc6 g2+ 38.Kg1 Be4 39.Rf8#.
Asadi–Assaubayeva: keep checking
Sequence: 30...exf4 31.Qc1 Qh4+ 32.Kg1 Qxg4+.
Pratyusha–Assaubayeva: invade the back rank
Sequence: 30...Re2 31.Qxd3 Re1+ 32.Kf2 Qxd3.
Assaubayeva–Zhu: queen the passer
Sequence: 57.a8=Q Rxg3+ 58.Kf1 Qf7+ 59.Rf2 Qxb3 60.Qd7+.
Assaubayeva–Harika: finish the attack
Sequence: 27.Qf4 f5 28.exf6 Rxf6 29.Qh6 Rxf1+ 30.Bxf1.
Assaubayeva–Zhu: activate rook and knight
Sequence: 33.Kg3 Re8 34.Ne5 Kg8 35.Nc6 g5 36.Rb8 gxf4+ 37.exf4.
Choose a supplied victory and open it in the on-page replay viewer.
Forcing speed
She recognises checks, captures and threats quickly enough to repeat at world blitz level.
Passed-pawn power
Her Candidates wins show how advanced pawns can restrict pieces and expose kings.
Both-colour confidence
The youth-title set contains victories with White and Black across varied openings.
Technical range
Long wins demonstrate patience after the immediate tactics have passed.
Scan forcing moves
Checks and captures often reveal the tactical route before quieter improvements.
Create two passers
Connected advanced pawns can overload a blockade more effectively than one runner.
Add attackers with tempo
Rook lifts and queen checks matter most when each move creates a fresh threat.
Convert actively
Keep rooks and kings active instead of protecting an advantage passively.
Bibisara Assaubayeva is a Kazakhstani International Master and three-time Women’s World Blitz Champion. She won the World Under-12 Girls title in 2016 and later qualified for the 2026 Women’s Candidates. Begin with her Candidates wins over Zhu Jiner and Kateryna Lagno to connect her titles with elite classical play.
Assaubayeva was born on 26 February 2004 in Taraz, Kazakhstan. Her rise from world youth champion to senior blitz champion occurred while she was still a teenager. Use the timeline to follow that progression before opening the replay lab.
Assaubayeva represents Kazakhstan. She has become one of the country’s most recognisable chess players through repeated world blitz success and elite team appearances. Replay her 2026 rapid-team wins to study how she handles short time controls for Kazakhstan’s chess generation.
Assaubayeva has won three Women’s World Blitz Championship titles. Her victories in 2021, 2022 and 2025 established exceptional consistency in the fastest official world championship. Pair the Harika and Zhu rapid-team replays to train the quick tactical decisions behind that reputation.
Yes, Assaubayeva became the youngest Women’s World Blitz Champion at seventeen in 2021. She defended the title in 2022 and regained it in 2025, proving the first victory was not an isolated result. Use the adviser’s fast-calculation route to sample games suited to blitz-style pattern recognition.
Assaubayeva holds the open International Master title and the Woman Grandmaster title. Those titles recognise classical strength, while her world blitz championships demonstrate exceptional speed and tactical accuracy. Replay her classical Candidates win over Lagno for evidence beyond her blitz achievements.
Assaubayeva received the Woman Grandmaster title in 2019. She was fifteen, continuing a title progression that began with major world youth success. Compare the 2016 Under-12 games with her 2026 Candidates wins to see how her technique matured.
Assaubayeva received the International Master title in 2020. The open title preceded her first Women’s World Blitz Championship by one year. Study the Candidates games to see the sustained calculation and endgame control supporting that title.
Yes, Assaubayeva played in the 2026 Women’s Candidates Tournament. The supplied wins over Zhu Jiner and Kateryna Lagno show her defeating elite opposition in that classical event. Replay games 11 and 12 consecutively to compare a passed-pawn race with a direct kingside initiative.
Yes, Assaubayeva won the 2016 World Under-12 Girls Championship. This page includes nine victories from that event, preserving the breadth of her title run rather than one isolated game. Follow games 1 through 9 chronologically to study her ability to win with both colours.
Assaubayeva reached a published classical rating above 2500 and was rated 2516 during the 2026 Candidates. Crossing 2500 placed her firmly within the open International Master strength range while she competed against the women’s elite. Use the Zhu and Lagno replays to examine her play at that rating level.
Assaubayeva is an energetic tactical player who also converts long technical advantages. Her games range from the mating finish 39.Rf8# against Mkrtchyan to a 60-move passed-pawn win over Zhu Jiner. Solve both linked diagrams to compare immediate calculation with sustained pressure.
Assaubayeva recognises forcing moves quickly and remains resourceful in unbalanced positions. Three world blitz titles show that her speed is repeatable under championship pressure rather than limited to casual online play. Calculate the Qxg4+, Qxd3 and Bxf1 positions with a short clock to train the same priorities.
Assaubayeva uses a broad repertoire with 1.d4 and 1.e4 as White and dynamic Sicilian, Benoni and queen-pawn structures as Black. The 14 wins span ECO codes from A05 to E15, demonstrating flexibility rather than dependence on one system. Choose the opening card matching the replay structure you found most instructive.
Start with Assaubayeva–Lagno from the 2026 Women’s Candidates. It combines elite opposition, active piece play and a dangerous e-pawn that reaches e8 with check. Calculate the final phase before replaying game 12 from move one.
Assaubayeva–Mkrtchyan from the 2016 World Under-12 Championship is the clearest mating attack. The exact finish 35.Rf7+ Ke8 36.Re1+ Kd8 37.Bc6 g2+ 38.Kg1 Be4 39.Rf8# rewards accurate calculation through counterplay. Solve that diagram before opening game 4.
Asadi–Assaubayeva is a compact model of Black-side king pressure. Assaubayeva’s pieces converge through 30...exf4 31.Qc1 Qh4+ 32.Kg1 Qxg4+, ending the game with checks and captures. Calculate the final sequence, then replay game 6 to identify the first attacking commitment.
Assaubayeva–Zhu Jiner from the 2026 Candidates is the strongest long technical example. Connected passed pawns reach a7 and b6 while her pieces keep Black’s counterplay under control until 60.Qd7+. Replay game 11 and pause whenever either side could exchange queens.
Assaubayeva–Lagno teaches how a protected passed pawn can dominate an exposed king. The e-pawn advances to e7 and then e8=Q while White’s queen and rooks maintain forcing pressure. Track the pawn from 34.e6 when replaying game 12.
The Candidates win over Zhu Jiner teaches coordinated passed-pawn play. Assaubayeva advances a- and b-pawns while using queen checks to prevent Black from organising a blockade. Calculate 57.a8=Q and the ensuing checks before replaying game 11.
Assaubayeva–Harika shows how rapidly an initiative can grow around an uncastled or weakened king. White’s rook lift to h3 and queen transfer to h6 force the tactical sequence ending with 30.Bxf1. Replay game 13 and mark every move that adds an attacker.
The rapid-team win over Zhu Jiner demonstrates active rook and knight coordination. Assaubayeva’s knight reaches c6 while the rook invades b8, leaving Black tied to multiple weaknesses before 37.exf4. Replay game 14 with a rapid time limit and compare your candidate moves.
Pratyusha–Assaubayeva teaches how Black can convert central activity into a decisive back-rank attack. The sequence 30...Re2 31.Qxd3 Re1+ 32.Kf2 Qxd3 combines rook penetration with a final queen capture. Solve the Qxd3 diagram before opening game 10.
The 2016 title run shows Assaubayeva winning nine supplied games with varied structures and both colours. It includes a direct mate, long pawn endings and technical Black victories rather than one repeated formula. Replay the games in round order and record which winning method appears in each.
Yes, Assaubayeva defeated Divya Deshmukh with Black in the 2016 World Under-12 Championship. She converted a rook-and-pawn ending by activating the king and advancing the e-pawn to e2. Open game 3 and study the transition after the queens leave the board.
Yes, Assaubayeva defeated Kateryna Lagno in the 2026 Women’s Candidates. Her attacking win features the powerful passed e-pawn and ends after 49.Kg3. Replay game 12 to study how she balanced king safety with pawn promotion threats.
Yes, this collection contains two Assaubayeva wins over Zhu Jiner in 2026. One is a 60-move Candidates battle and the other is a quicker World Rapid Team victory, providing a useful time-control comparison. Replay games 11 and 14 back to back.
Yes, Assaubayeva beat Harika Dronavalli at the 2026 FIDE World Rapid Team event. The game ends after a kingside attack in which White’s queen, rook and bishop overwhelm Black’s defenders. Calculate the final Bxf1 position before replaying game 13.
Yes, Assaubayeva’s games offer clear models of forcing play, passed pawns and active conversion. The collection includes short tactical finishes and longer endgames, so it supports several levels of calculation practice. Start with one diagram and then replay the complete game without engine assistance.
Calculate each diagram for three minutes before moving any pieces. Every card provides a short exact sequence and a button to the full source game, allowing immediate verification. Write down checks, captures and threats first, then compare your line with the replay.
Choose the type of position you want to train and the time available. The adviser maps that choice to a genuine win from the supplied PGNs, from a youth-title mate to a Candidates endgame. Open the recommended game and follow its discovery tip with a contrasting replay.
Set a short clock and search forcing moves in the order checks, captures and threats. Assaubayeva’s finishes against Asadi, Pratyusha and Harika reward rapid recognition of exposed kings and overloaded defenders. Solve those three diagrams once quickly and once without a clock to compare accuracy.
A comprehensive tactics course best matches Assaubayeva’s world-class blitz calculation. The recommended 39.5-hour Winning Combinations course expands the forcing patterns seen in her Qxg4+, Qxd3 and mating finishes. Complete two replay-linked diagrams before continuing to the course card.
Continue with one tactical theme and one opening structure from the replays. Her games point naturally toward passed-pawn calculation, king attacks, the Sicilian and dynamic queen-pawn play. Use the opening cards for structural study and the course section for deeper combinations.
A wins-only collection makes her successful attacking and conversion patterns easier to identify. These 14 PGNs still provide variety because they span youth, junior, Candidates and elite rapid-team events across eleven years. Compare the earliest and latest games to separate enduring strengths from later technical growth.
Supercharge Your Chess Tactics with Winning Combinations
Continue with this 39.5-hour tactics course after studying Assaubayeva’s forcing wins.
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