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Ju Wenjun Replay Lab, Bio and Games

Ju Wenjun is a Chinese Grandmaster, reigning five-time Women’s World Champion, former Women’s World Blitz Champion and two-time Women’s World Rapid Champion. Use the replay lab, adviser and diagrams below to study her calm positional style, title-match technique and conversion skill.

Ju Wenjun key facts

Start here if you want the fast player profile before studying the games.

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Five-time World Champion

Women’s World Champion in 2018, 2018, 2020, 2023 and 2025.

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2600+ peak

One of the few women to cross 2600, with a peak rating of 2604.

Rapid and blitz titles

Two-time Women’s World Rapid Champion and Women’s World Blitz Champion.

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Calm positional style

Known for patient improvement, piece harmony, pressure-building and endgame conversion.


Style profile and favourite openings

Ju Wenjun’s games are ideal for studying quiet pressure, active rooks, passed pawns and practical defence.

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Queen’s Pawn systems

Many supplied White games use 1.d4, London-style setups and Queen’s Gambit structures.

Study Queen’s Pawn openings
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London-style pressure

Bf4 setups appear in several Ju games and lead naturally to long-term pressure.

Study the London System
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Sicilian counterplay

Her Black-side Sicilian games show how to absorb a pawn storm and counterattack.

Study the Sicilian Defence
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French Defence activity

The Hou Yifan game is a sharp model of French Defence activity under pressure.

Study the French Defence

Ju Wenjun study-fit adviser

Choose your study problem and get a specific replay or diagram route.


Five Ju Wenjun turning points

These positions come directly from the supplied replay games. Inspect the idea, then open the matching full game.

Goryachkina Passed-Pawn Conversion

Ju Wenjun vs Aleksandra Goryachkina, 2020: after the passed-pawn race, White is winning by calm conversion.

Example sequence: 1.Nf3 d5 2.b3 c5 3.e3 a6 4.Bb2 Nc6 5.d4 Nf6 6.Nbd2 cxd4 7.exd4 g6 8.a3 Bg7 9.Bd3 Nh5 10.g3 O-O 11.Ne5 Nxe5 12.dxe5 d4 13.f4 f6 14.Qe2 fxe5 15.fxe5 Bh6 16.O-O-O Be3 17.Rhf1 Bh3 18.Rxf8+ Qxf8 19.Kb1 b5 20.Nf1 Bg1 21.a4 bxa4 22.bxa4 Qc8 23.Bc4+ Kh8 24.e6 Nf6 25.Rxd4 Bxd4 26.Bxd4 Qb7+ 27.Ka2 Rd8 28.Bb2 Rb8 29.Bb3 Qg2 30.Qe5 Rxb3 31.cxb3 Qc6 32.Nd2 Bxe6 33.Ka3 Kg8 34.Nf3 Qd5 35.Qb8+ Kg7 36.Ne5 Qc5+ 37.Qb4 Qxb4+ 38.Kxb4 Kf8 39.Nc4 Ne4 40.Bd4 Ke8 41.Ka5 Nd6 42.Nd2 Bc8 43.Kb6 Kd8 44.Be5 Kd7 45.Bf4 g5 46.Bxg5 e5 47.Be3 Ke6 48.Kc7 Bd7 49.Bc5 Nf5 50.Kb6 Kd5 51.Nb1 e4 52.Nc3+ Ke5 53.Kxa6 e3 54.a5 Nd4 55.b4 Bg4 56.Kb6 e2 57.Bxd4+ Kxd4 58.Nxe2+ Bxe2 59.a6 Bf3 60.a7 h5 61.b5 Kc4 62.h3 Kd5.

Lei Rook-Pawn Squeeze

Ju Wenjun vs Lei Tingjie, Norway Chess 2024: 45.Rb7 finishes the rook-and-passer squeeze.

Example sequence: 1.d4 d5 2.c4 c6 3.cxd5 cxd5 4.Bf4 Nc6 5.e3 Nf6 6.Nc3 Bf5 7.Nf3 e6 8.Qb3 Bb4 9.Bb5 O-O 10.Bxc6 Bxc3+ 11.Qxc3 Rc8 12.Ne5 Ng4 13.Nxg4 Bxg4 14.Qb4 Rxc6 15.Qxb7 Qb6 16.Qxb6 axb6 17.Kd2 Rfc8 18.Rhc1 Kf8 19.a4 Ke8 20.Rxc6 Rxc6 21.b4 Bf5 22.a5 bxa5 23.bxa5 Ra6 24.Bc7 Kd7 25.Bb6 Ra8 26.a6 Kc6 27.Bc5 e5 28.a7 Kb7 29.dxe5 Rc8 30.Ra5 Ka8 31.Kc3 Be6 32.Kb4 Rc7 33.Ra6 Rc8 34.Rd6 Kb7 35.Kb5 h5 36.Bd4 Re8 37.Ka5 Rc8 38.Rb6+ Ka8 39.Ka6 g5 40.Rd6 Rg8 41.Kb6 g4 42.Rc6 h4 43.Rc7 h3 44.gxh3 gxh3 45.Rb7.

Hou Yifan French Counterattack

Hou Yifan vs Ju Wenjun, Gibraltar 2017: after 36...Qd2+, Black’s pieces dominate the exposed king.

Example sequence: 1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.e5 Nfd7 5.f4 c5 6.Nf3 Nc6 7.Be3 Be7 8.Qd2 O-O 9.dxc5 Nxc5 10.O-O-O a6 11.Qf2 b6 12.Nd4 Qc7 13.g3 Bb7 14.Bg2 Na5 15.f5 Qxe5 16.Bf4 Qf6 17.h4 e5 18.Nxd5 Bxd5 19.Bg5 Qd6 20.Bxe7 Qxe7 21.Bxd5 exd4 22.Bxa8 Rxa8 23.Rhe1 Qc7 24.b4 Nc6 25.bxc5 bxc5 26.Qf4 Qb6 27.Qd6 h5 28.Re5 c4 29.Rde1 c3 30.Re8+ Rxe8 31.Rxe8+ Kh7 32.Qd5 d3 33.Qxd3 Nb4 34.Qe4 Qg1+ 35.Qe1 Qg2 36.Qe4 Qd2+.

Savchenko Najdorf Clamp

Boris Savchenko vs Ju Wenjun, Aeroflot 2012: after 40...Bf2, Black’s pressure has taken over.

Example sequence: 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 a6 6.Bg5 e6 7.f4 Be7 8.Qf3 Qc7 9.O-O-O Nbd7 10.g4 b5 11.Bxf6 Nxf6 12.g5 Nd7 13.f5 O-O 14.h4 b4 15.Nce2 e5 16.Nb3 f6 17.g6 h6 18.c3 a5 19.Kb1 Nb6 20.Rc1 Qa7 21.c4 Bb7 22.Ng3 Nd7 23.Qe2 a4 24.Nd2 Bd8 25.Nf3 Bb6 26.Bg2 Rfc8 27.Rhd1 Bf2 28.Nf1 Nc5 29.Nxe5 Nb3 30.Nf7 Nxc1 31.Rxc1 b3 32.a3 Bc5 33.Qd2 Re8 34.Bf3 Bc6 35.Qg2 Qb7 36.Rd1 Bxe4+ 37.Bxe4 Qxe4+ 38.Qxe4 Rxe4 39.Ng3 Rxh4 40.Re1 Bf2.

Muzychuk Armageddon Finish

Ju Wenjun vs Anna Muzychuk, Norway 2024: after 48.h7, the passed pawn decides the fight.

Example sequence: 1.e4 e5 2.Bc4 Nf6 3.d3 Nc6 4.Nc3 Bb4 5.Nf3 d6 6.O-O Bxc3 7.bxc3 Na5 8.Bb3 h6 9.Re1 O-O 10.h3 c5 11.Nd2 Be6 12.c4 Nc6 13.Nf1 Kh8 14.Ng3 Ng8 15.f4 f6 16.f5 Bc8 17.Nh5 Qe8 18.Re3 Nge7 19.Rg3 Rf7 20.Bd2 a5 21.c3 Nxf5 22.exf5 Bxf5 23.Qf3 Qd7 24.Rf1 Ne7 25.Nxg7 Rxg7 26.Rxg7 Kxg7 27.g4 Bg6 28.Qxf6+ Kh7 29.Ba4 Nc6 30.Qh4 Qg7 31.Rf6 Rf8 32.Bxh6 Qxf6 33.Bg5+ Kg7 34.Bxf6+ Rxf6 35.Bxc6 bxc6 36.Qg3 e4 37.dxe4 Bxe4 38.h4 Re6 39.h5 Bb1 40.Qf2 Bd3 41.g5 Bxc4 42.h6+ Kg6 43.Qf8 Re1+ 44.Kg2 Re2+ 45.Kf3 Re5 46.Qg7+ Kh5 47.Qxe5 dxe5 48.h7.


Ju Wenjun Replay Lab

Choose a supplied Ju Wenjun game. The selector is grouped by title-match technique, conversion wins, Black-side counterplay and Norway Chess fighting games.


Career milestones worth knowing

These milestones explain why the replay games belong on a Ju Wenjun player page.

  • Shanghai beginnings: Ju Wenjun learned chess as a child and developed through the Chinese chess system.
  • Grandmaster: FIDE awarded her the GM title in 2014.
  • 2600 milestone: She became one of the few women to cross the 2600 rating barrier.
  • World Champion: She first became Women’s World Champion in 2018 and defended the title multiple times.
  • Rapid and blitz: Her world rapid and blitz titles show strength beyond classical match play.
  • China team success: She has been a key member of successful Chinese national women’s teams.
  • Modern elite events: Tata Steel and Norway Chess appearances give useful recent examples of her style.
  • Study identity: Her games are most useful for piece harmony, patience, pressure and conversion.

Ju Wenjun FAQ

These answers cover Ju’s titles, famous games, openings, style and the best way to use the replay lab.

Identity, titles and career facts

Who is Ju Wenjun?

Ju Wenjun is a Chinese Grandmaster and the reigning five-time Women’s World Champion. She is also a former Women’s World Blitz Champion and a two-time Women’s World Rapid Champion. Use the Key facts panel before opening the World Championship replay group.

Where should Ju Wenjun be filed in a chess-player glossary?

Ju Wenjun should be filed under J because Ju is the family name. The glossary style should be Ju, Wenjun rather than Wenjun, Ju. Use the FamousPlayer guide link near the page bottom to keep the index entry consistent.

When was Ju Wenjun born?

Ju Wenjun was born on 31 January 1991 in Shanghai, China. Her fixed biography facts are useful, but her world-champion technique is the main study value here. Use the Key facts panel and then replay the Goryachkina match game.

What chess title does Ju Wenjun hold?

Ju Wenjun holds the Grandmaster title. She received the GM title in 2014 and later built one of the strongest modern women’s world-championship records. Use the Career milestones section before choosing a replay route.

How many times has Ju Wenjun been Women’s World Champion?

Ju Wenjun is a five-time Women’s World Champion. Her title record includes her initial 2018 win and successful defences in 2018, 2020, 2023 and 2025. Use the World Championship match technique replay group to study her match style.

Is Ju Wenjun the current Women’s World Champion?

Yes, Ju Wenjun is the reigning Women’s World Champion based on the supplied profile information. Her current-champion status makes her games especially useful for studying modern match technique. Use the Goryachkina and Tan replay entries to start with title-match chess.

Did Ju Wenjun cross 2600?

Yes, Ju Wenjun reached a peak rating above 2600. Crossing 2600 is a major elite benchmark and supports her reputation for consistency as well as title-match success. Use the Key facts panel and then inspect the Lei conversion diagram.

What is Ju Wenjun’s playing style?

Ju Wenjun’s style is calm, positional and patient. Her games often feature improved pieces, pressure on fixed weaknesses and endgame conversion rather than quick tactical chaos. Use the Study-fit adviser to pick the positional conversion route.

Why is Ju Wenjun a good player to study?

Ju Wenjun is a good player to study because she shows how small advantages become wins. Her best games teach patience, piece regrouping, passed-pawn play and practical defence under pressure. Use the Five Ju Wenjun turning points section before replaying a full game.

Which Ju Wenjun game should I replay first?

Start with Ju Wenjun vs Aleksandra Goryachkina from the 2020 Women’s World Championship match. It is a model of match-pressure technique and passed-pawn conversion. Use the Goryachkina passed-pawn diagram and then open the full replay.

Model games and replay choices

Which Ju Wenjun game is best for endgame conversion?

Ju Wenjun vs Lei Tingjie from Norway Chess Women 2024 is the clearest endgame conversion in this set. The final Rb7 position shows how an outside passer and active rook can dominate a simplified position. Use the Lei rook-pawn squeeze diagram before replaying it.

Which Ju Wenjun game is best for world-championship technique?

Ju Wenjun vs Goryachkina from 2020 is the best world-championship technique model here. The game moves from a tense middlegame into a calm passed-pawn race that Ju converts under match pressure. Use the World Championship replay group to study that game first.

Which Ju Wenjun game is best for Black-side counterplay?

Hou Yifan vs Ju Wenjun from Gibraltar 2017 is the sharpest Black-side counterplay model here. Ju accepts complications in a French Defence and then takes over with active pieces and checks. Use the Hou Yifan French counterattack diagram before opening the replay.

Which Ju Wenjun game is best for Sicilian players?

Boris Savchenko vs Ju Wenjun from the 2012 Aeroflot Open is the best Sicilian model in this set. Black survives a dangerous kingside pawn storm and then converts with pressure against White’s king and kingside. Use the Savchenko Najdorf clamp diagram before replaying it.

Which Ju Wenjun Norway Chess game should I study?

Ju Wenjun vs Anna Muzychuk from Norway Armageddon 2024 is a strong fighting-game choice. It features material imbalance, king pressure and a passed h-pawn that reaches h7. Use the Muzychuk Armageddon finish diagram before opening the Norway Chess group.

Did Ju Wenjun beat Hou Yifan?

Yes, the supplied PGNs include Hou Yifan vs Ju Wenjun from Gibraltar 2017, which Ju won as Black. The game is especially interesting because both players are Chinese world-class stars and the opening becomes a sharp French Defence. Use the Hou Yifan diagram to study the decisive counterattack.

Did Ju Wenjun beat Goryachkina?

Yes, the supplied match PGN includes Ju Wenjun beating Aleksandra Goryachkina in game 9 of their 2020 Women’s World Championship match. That win is a key model for Ju’s match resilience and endgame control. Use the Goryachkina replay starter in the Replay Lab.

Did Ju Wenjun beat Lei Tingjie?

Yes, the supplied PGNs include Ju Wenjun beating Lei Tingjie at Norway Chess Women 2024. The game is a clean technical model with an outside passed pawn and active rook. Use the Lei conversion diagram before opening the replay.

Did Ju Wenjun beat Anna Muzychuk?

Yes, the supplied PGNs include Ju Wenjun beating Anna Muzychuk in a 2024 Norway Armageddon game. The finish shows a dangerous passed h-pawn after a complicated attacking phase. Use the Muzychuk diagram and then load the Norway Chess replay group.

Openings and playing style

What openings does Ju Wenjun play as White?

The supplied games show Ju using 1.d4 systems, 1.Nf3, London-style setups, Queen’s Gambit structures and flexible positional openings. Her White games often prioritise control and long-term pressure over early forcing tactics. Use the Favourite openings panel before choosing a White-side replay.

What openings does Ju Wenjun play as Black?

The supplied Black wins show Ju using Sicilian structures, French Defence ideas and practical counterattacking systems. Her Black-side wins often involve absorbing pressure and then converting activity. Use the Black-side Sicilian and French wins replay group.

Does Ju Wenjun play the Sicilian Defence?

Yes, several supplied games show Ju Wenjun winning with Sicilian structures as Black. The Savchenko, Ambartsumova, Zhu and Vaishali games all show different types of Sicilian counterplay. Use the Sicilian card in the Favourite openings panel before replaying Savchenko vs Ju.

Does Ju Wenjun play the French Defence?

Yes, the supplied Hou Yifan game shows Ju Wenjun winning with a French Defence structure. The game is a useful example of accepting structural and tactical tension for active piece play. Use the Hou Yifan French counterattack diagram as the starting point.

Does Ju Wenjun play the London System?

Yes, some supplied games use London-style development with Bf4 and flexible central play. The Nancy Lane, Vaishali and Lei examples show how those structures can become positional squeezes or endgame wins. Use the White-side replay entries to compare them.

What makes Ju Wenjun’s style different from tactical specialists?

Ju Wenjun’s style is usually less about one explosive trick and more about patient improvement. She often wins by making her pieces better, fixing targets and converting the endgame when the opponent runs out of counterplay. Use the Lei and Goryachkina diagrams to see that difference.

Can club players learn from Ju Wenjun’s games?

Yes, club players can learn a lot from Ju Wenjun’s games. The main lesson is to keep improving the position after the opening instead of rushing for a tactic that is not ready. Use the Study-fit adviser to choose a conversion route that matches your weakness.

Can beginners learn from Ju Wenjun’s games?

Yes, beginners can learn from Ju Wenjun’s games if they focus on simple themes. Start with passed pawns, active rooks, king safety and piece coordination rather than memorising long variations. Use the Lei rook-pawn squeeze diagram as the easiest first board.

Can advanced players learn from Ju Wenjun’s games?

Yes, advanced players can learn from Ju Wenjun’s games because her wins often depend on timing and endgame judgement. The World Championship match games and Norway Chess long wins are especially useful for deeper comparison. Use the replay selector to compare Goryachkina, Tan, Lei and Humpy.

Study method and practical lessons

Why include Norway Chess games on a Ju Wenjun page?

The Norway Chess games show Ju Wenjun in recent elite classical and Armageddon conditions. They add current practical examples of her technique, fighting style and endgame resilience. Use the Norway Chess 2024 fighting games group after the World Championship group.

Why include diagrams on a Ju Wenjun page?

The diagrams make Ju Wenjun’s technical style easier to study. One position can show the point of a passed pawn, active rook or counterattacking queen better than a long game score alone. Use the Five Ju Wenjun turning points section before picking a replay.

Why include a replay lab on a Ju Wenjun page?

The replay lab turns Ju Wenjun’s title record into study material. It lets you compare match games, positional conversions and Black-side counterattacks from the same player. Use the Replay Lab after reading the Key facts panel.

What should I study first from Ju Wenjun?

Study the Goryachkina match win first for world-championship technique, the Lei game first for rook-pawn conversion, and the Hou Yifan game first for Black-side counterplay. Choosing one theme keeps the session practical. Use the Study-fit adviser to select your first replay.

What is the best Ju Wenjun lesson for turn-based chess?

The best Ju Wenjun lesson for turn-based chess is patience before forcing action. Her games show how extra time can be used to improve pieces, count pawn races and avoid unnecessary risk. Use the Goryachkina and Lei diagrams as calculation exercises.

How should I use this Ju Wenjun page?

Use this Ju Wenjun page as a positional conversion study lab. Start with the Key facts panel, choose a goal in the adviser, inspect the recommended diagram and then replay the matching game. Use the Replay Lab selector to repeat that process with a different theme.

What makes Ju Wenjun one of the most successful modern champions?

Ju Wenjun’s success comes from sustained world-championship results across multiple cycles, plus rapid and blitz world titles. Her long run shows consistency, match discipline and adaptability rather than a single peak event. Use the Career milestones section before replaying the title-match games.

Study path: Ju Wenjun’s games reward patient conversion. Pause at one turning-point diagram, name the improving move, then replay the endgame.
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