Born
21 October 1996, Hanoi, Vietnam.
Lê Tuấn Minh is a Vietnamese grandmaster, 2020 national champion, Vietnam’s 13th GM and strong online blitz player. Use the replay lab, adviser and diagrams to study his Arjun Erigaisi bullet wins, Lê Quang Liêm Airthings games, World Rapid resilience, World Blitz examples and HD Bank Cup play.
21 October 1996, Hanoi, Vietnam.
Grandmaster in 2022.
Vietnamese Champion in 2020 with 7/8.
Vietnam’s 13th grandmaster.
2598 in October 2024.
Known online as gmminhle.
Tuấn Minh’s page works best as a modern Vietnamese GM and online-speed profile. The supplied games give strong hooks: two Arjun Erigaisi bullet wins, two Lê Quang Liêm Airthings games, a World Rapid draw with Jeffery Xiong and several World Blitz and HD Bank Cup examples.
National champion, Vietnam’s 13th GM and Hanoi background give the profile evergreen value.
Bullet, blitz and rapid games give the page a sharp modern online-chess route.
Choose a Lê Tuấn Minh game from the grouped replay lab, then open the viewer to study the key moments move by move.
Pick the training angle and jump to a useful model game.
Focus plan: Start with the Arjun mate, then compare the Arjun win with White.
Use these diagrams to spot the key moment in each model game before opening the replay.
Model moment: Erigaisi Arjun vs Tuan Minh Le, Bullet Chess Championship 2023.07.17 (0-1)
Example sequence: After 1.e4 e6 2.Nc3 d5 3.d4 dxe4 ... 42...Rxf2#
Model moment: Tuan Minh Le vs Erigaisi Arjun, Bullet Chess Championship 2023.07.17 (1-0)
Example sequence: After 1.Nf3 e6 2.b3 c5 3.Bb2 Nf6 ... 25.Qxb8+
Model moment: Tuan Minh Le vs Quang Liem Le, Airthings Masters Div 3 2023.02.06 (1-0)
Example sequence: After 1.d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 g6 3.c4 Bg7 ... 71.Rc6+
Model moment: Jeffery Xiong vs Le Tuan, Minh, World Rapid Championship 2024.12.26 (1/2-1/2)
Example sequence: After 1.c4 e6 2.Nf3 d5 3.d4 h6 ... 81.Ng5
Model moment: Samir Sahidi vs Tuan Minh Le, World Blitz Championship 2025.12.30 (0-1)
Example sequence: After 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 a6 ... 53...Qf3+
Model moment: Tuan Minh Le vs Dmitry Gordievsky, 8th HD Bank Cup 2018 2018.03.13 (1-0)
Example sequence: After 1.d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 g6 3.Bg5 Bg7 ... 54.a7
Use these focused opening routes after a replay when you want to turn Tuấn Minh’s practical games into a study plan.
Use these answers as routes into the replay lab, diagrams, adviser and opening links.
Lê Tuấn Minh is a Vietnamese grandmaster born on 21 October 1996 in Hanoi. He became Vietnam’s 13th grandmaster in 2022 and won the Vietnamese Championship in 2020. Start with the at-a-glance cards and replay lab.
He should be filed under L because Lê is the surname. Vietnamese custom may refer to him by the given name Tuấn Minh, but a Western-style chess index should list him as Lê, Tuấn Minh. Use the index entry and full page together.
He is page-worthy because he combines national-champion status, Vietnam’s 13th GM title and a modern online speed-chess identity. The games add wins over Arjun Erigaisi and Lê Quang Liêm, plus World Rapid and World Blitz examples. Use the replay lab for the chess evidence.
The strongest hook is Vietnamese grandmaster plus online blitz and bullet strength. The 2020 national title and Vietnam’s 13th GM status add strong evergreen context. Use the Bullet and Airthings replay groups first.
He earned his final norm in July 2022 and became Vietnam’s 13th grandmaster. The supplied profile also notes that he won the Vietnamese Championship in 2020. Use the profile cards before choosing a replay.
The supplied profile gives his peak rating as 2598 in October 2024. The replay set also includes fast-time-control games where his online strength is clear. Use the World Rapid and World Blitz groups.
His online hook is the gmminhle streaming identity and strong bullet/blitz games. The Arjun Erigaisi and Lê Quang Liêm games make that angle much more playable. Use the Bullet Chess Championship and Airthings groups.
The page includes 15 legal games from Bullet Chess Championship, Airthings Masters, World Rapid, World Blitz and HD Bank Cup. They include wins against Arjun Erigaisi, Lê Quang Liêm, Dmitry Gordievsky and several fast-time-control opponents. Use the grouped selector for the full set.
Yes, all 15 legal game scores were retained. Six games had one-ply final-result differences, but the legal replay scores are still usable. Use the grouped selector for the full set.
Start with the Bullet Chess Championship mate against Arjun Erigaisi. It is short, sharp and gives the page a strong modern-name hook. Use the Arjun mate diagram and replay.
Two Bullet Chess Championship games against Arjun Erigaisi are included. Tuấn Minh wins once with Black in a mating finish and once with White from a flexible Nf3/b3 setup. Use the two Arjun replay buttons together.
Two Airthings Masters games against Lê Quang Liêm are included. Tuấn Minh wins one with White and one with Black, giving the page a strong Vietnamese-star comparison route. Use the Airthings replay group.
The World Rapid draw against Jeffery Xiong from New York 2024 is included. It is a long, resilient endgame against a 2700+ opponent. Use the Xiong diagram and replay.
The page includes World Blitz games from Doha 2025 against Sahidi, Gaehwiler, Droin and Erdogmus. They give the page a current speed-chess route. Use the World Blitz Championship group.
Five HD Bank Cup 2018 games are included. They show Tuấn Minh in a Vietnamese tournament setting with wins as White and Black. Use the HD Bank Cup replay group.
The Arjun mate and the Sahidi Ruy Lopez win are the clearest attacking examples. Both end with forcing play around the king. Use the diagram lab before replaying them.
The Xiong World Rapid draw is the best endgame-resilience example. It is long, balanced and useful for studying practical defence. Use the Xiong replay when you want a slower study route.
Club players can learn flexible opening choices, speed-chess tactical alertness and practical conversion. The Arjun, Quang Liem and Gordievsky games are especially useful. Start with the adviser’s quick route.
Advanced players can study fast-time-control calculation, modern online repertoire choices and flexible Nf3/g3 systems. The Quang Liem, Xiong and World Blitz games are best for that. Use the deep route in the adviser.
A quick route is Arjun with Black, Arjun with White and Sahidi. That gives a mate, a clean tactical win and a World Blitz attacking example. Use the adviser’s bullet route.
A deep route is Quang Liem with White, Quang Liem with Black and Xiong. That gives a strong Vietnamese comparison route and a long 2700+ rapid endgame. Use the adviser’s Vietnamese-star route.
The focused opening links are French Defense, English Opening, Réti Opening, Ruy Lopez and King’s Indian Defence. They match the strongest repeated or high-value structures in the supplied games. Use the opening cards after one replay.
The Arjun mate begins from a French Defense structure. It is the clearest headline opening route on the page. Use the French card after the Arjun mate replay.
The Xiong and Quang Liem games include English-style structures. These games are useful for flexible c4/Nf3 development. Use the English card after Xiong or Quang Liem.
Tuấn Minh uses Nf3/b3 and Nf3/g3 setups in several games, including the Arjun win with White. That makes the Réti route very natural. Use the Réti card after the Arjun White replay.
The Sahidi World Blitz win is a Ruy Lopez game. It gives the page a classical e4 e5 speed-chess route. Use the Ruy Lopez card after Sahidi.
Several d4/Nf3/g3 games connect to King’s Indian or Indian-game structures, including the Quang Liem and Erdogmus games. It gives a useful strategic route from the replay set. Use the KID card after Airthings or World Blitz.
Yes, briefly, because the supplied profile includes the gmminhle channel and follower context. Keep it as an online-chess hook rather than making the page about streaming only. Use the replay lab as the main feature.
The index should list him as Lê, Tuấn Minh under L. A good description is Vietnamese grandmaster, 2020 national champion, Vietnam’s 13th GM, strong online blitz player, streamer and modern Vietnamese chess figure. Use the full page for replay detail.
After one replay, follow the opening card that matches the game: French for Arjun, English for Xiong or Quang Liem, Réti for Nf3/b3 systems, Ruy Lopez for Sahidi, or KID for Indian-game structures. That turns the profile into a practical study path. Use the opening-route cards below the diagram lab.
Use Tuấn Minh’s games to study speed-chess tactics, flexible Nf3 systems, Vietnamese GM development and practical rapid/blitz resilience.