Born
5 March 1998, Omsk, Russia.
Vladislav Artemiev is a former prodigy, 2019 European Champion, Russian Champion, World Team gold medallist and elite rapid/blitz player. Use the replay lab, adviser and diagrams to study his tactical finishes, championship wins and modern dynamic style.
5 March 1998, Omsk, Russia.
Grandmaster in 2014.
2761 in June 2019.
Won the 2019 European Individual Championship.
Russian Champion in 2023 and 2024.
Multiple rapid and blitz titles plus elite online results.
Artemiev’s strongest evergreen hooks are his European Championship title, world top-ten peak, Gibraltar Masters win, World Team gold and Russian Championship titles. His speed-chess results give the page a second route for players who know him through rapid, blitz and online events.
The Hracek, Kulaots and Russian Championship replays show classical event strength.
The Vidit, Giri, Ponkratov and rapid examples show the tactical speed-chess route.
Choose a Vladislav Artemiev 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 Artemiev–Hracek, then compare Artemiev–Kulaots.
Use these diagrams to spot the key moment in each model game before opening the replay.
Model moment: Vladislav Artemiev vs Zbynek Hracek, European Championship 2019.03.26 (1-0)
Example sequence: After 1.c4 c5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Nc3 Nf6 ... 29.Qxf6+
Model moment: Vladislav Artemiev vs Vidit Santosh Gujrathi, FIDE Chess.com Online Nations Cup 2020.05.09 (1-0)
Example sequence: After 1.d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 d5 3.Bg5 Ne4 ... 26.Bb4#
Model moment: Vladislav Artemiev vs Anish Giri, GCT Bucharest Rapid & Blitz 2019.11.07 (1-0)
Example sequence: After 1.c4 c6 2.e4 d5 3.exd5 cxd5 ... 30.Ng5
Model moment: Vladislav Artemiev vs Evgeny Tomashevsky, 76th ch-RUS 2023 2023.10.02 (1-0)
Example sequence: After 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 Bb4 ... 46.Rd1
Model moment: Kateryna Lagno vs Vladislav Artemiev, 76th Russian Championship 2023.10.05 (0-1)
Example sequence: After 1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.e5 c5 ... 36...Kh7
Model moment: Artyom Timofeev vs Vladislav Artemiev, 76th Russian Championship 2023.10.08 (0-1)
Example sequence: After 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 d5 ... 87...a3
Use these focused opening routes after a replay when you want to turn Artemiev’s practical games into a study plan.
Use these answers as routes into the replay lab, diagrams, adviser and opening links.
Vladislav Artemiev is a Russian grandmaster who has played under the FIDE flag since 2022. He is a former prodigy, 2019 European Champion, Russian Champion and elite rapid/blitz specialist. Start with the at-a-glance cards and the European Champion replay group.
Artemiev is page-worthy because he reached the world top ten, won the 2019 European Championship, won Gibraltar 2019, helped win World Team gold and later won Russian Championship titles. He also has a major speed-chess reputation. Use the replay lab to connect those achievements with model games.
The strongest hooks are European Champion 2019, peak rating 2761, world top ten, Gibraltar Masters winner, World Team gold, Russian Champion in 2023 and 2024, and elite rapid/blitz strength. These hooks cover both classical and fast formats. Use the career cards before choosing a replay.
The supplied profile gives Artemiev’s peak rating as 2761 in June 2019. It also gives a June 2026 rating of 2641 and peak ranking of world number ten. Use the European Championship and rapid/blitz groups to study that peak-era style.
Artemiev became a grandmaster in 2014. The supplied biography also frames him as a former prodigy with strong youth and junior results. Use the Baku Open replay and early rise route for that development angle.
In 2019, Artemiev won the Gibraltar Masters, the European Individual Championship and helped Russia win the World Team Championship. The supplied biography also notes individual board gold at the World Team Championship. Use the European Champion replay group as the page’s main 2019 route.
The included European Championship games are Artemiev–Hracek and Artemiev–Kulaots from Skopje 2019. They show both a tactical finish and a long strategic conversion. Use the European Champion replay group and Hracek diagram.
The page includes six games from the 2023 Russian Championship run. They cover wins against Tomashevsky, Sychev, Rozum, Lagno, Murzin and Timofeev. Use the Russian Championship replay group.
Start with Artemiev–Vidit because it ends in a clean mate. It is a direct tactical example and works well as a quick study route. Use the Vidit diagram and replay.
Artemiev–Giri from Bucharest Rapid & Blitz 2019 is included. It shows attacking pressure from a Caro-Kann structure. Use the Giri diagram and rapid/blitz replay group.
Liang–Artemiev and Dominguez–Artemiev are strong Black-side rapid examples. They show active piece play and direct king pressure. Use the online rapid replay group.
Start with Artemiev–Tomashevsky from the 2023 Russian Championship. It is a strong win against a top-class positional player. Use the Tomashevsky diagram and replay.
Timofeev–Artemiev from the 2023 Russian Championship is the long technical conversion in this set. It is useful for studying patience and endgame pressure. Use the Timofeev diagram and replay.
Lagno–Artemiev from the 2023 Russian Championship is the French Defense Black-side example. It shows Artemiev accepting structure and then using active queen play. Use the Lagno diagram and replay.
Yes, all 16 unique legal game scores were retained in the replay lab. Three games had only a one-ply final-result tag mismatch, which does not affect the legal replay. Use the grouped selector for the full set.
Artemiev’s style is dynamic, fast, tactically alert and technically capable. He can attack in rapid games but also convert long classical positions. Use the Hracek, Vidit and Timofeev diagrams to see the range.
Club players can learn how to turn pressure into tactical finishes without needing huge opening theory. Many of his model games show clear attacking patterns from playable structures. Start with Vidit, Hracek or Rozum.
Advanced players can study speed of decision-making, dynamic imbalance and conversion technique. The Kulaots, Tomashevsky and Timofeev games are especially useful for deeper work. Use the European and Russian Championship groups.
A quick route is Vidit, Hracek and Giri. That gives a mating pattern, a European Championship attack and a rapid win over an elite opponent. Use the adviser’s quick attacking route.
A deep route is Kulaots, Tomashevsky, Murzin and Timofeev. That covers conversion, practical pressure, technical endgames and long-form resilience. Use the diagram lab before each replay.
The focused opening links are English Opening, Caro-Kann, French Defense, Ruy Lopez and Queen’s Gambit. They match repeated or high-value structures from the supplied games. Use the opening cards after one replay.
Several Artemiev games start with English or 1.b3/1.Nf3 flank structures. That fits his flexible style and the European Championship win over Hracek. Use the English card after the Hracek or Kulaots replay.
Artemiev’s wins against Giri and Rozum use Caro-Kann structures. They also produce direct attacking moments rather than quiet theory only. Use the Caro-Kann card after the Giri or Rozum replay.
Lagno–Artemiev is a clear French Defense example from the 2023 Russian Championship. It gives a useful Black-side study route. Use the French card after the Lagno replay.
Liang–Artemiev and Sychev–Artemiev use Ruy Lopez structures with Black. They show active counterplay from classical e4 e5 positions. Use the Ruy Lopez card after either Black-side replay.
The Murzin and Hracek games connect to Queen’s Gambit family structures. They give classical d4 follow-up routes after the replay. Use the Queen’s Gambit card after Murzin or Hracek.
Yes, the page covers his rapid and blitz strength without letting it overwhelm his classical achievements. The replay lab includes rapid, blitz and online rapid examples alongside championship games. Use the rapid/blitz replay group for that angle.
The supplied biography notes Artemiev’s shared second place and silver medal on tiebreaks at the 2025 World Rapid Championship. The supplied game set includes a 2025 Aeroflot classical game rather than that rapid medal game. Use the 2025 Aeroflot replay for a recent-game route.
The index should describe Artemiev as European Champion, Russian Champion, Gibraltar winner, World Team gold medallist, 2761 peak player and elite rapid/blitz specialist. That is concise and leaves the full page for the replay detail. Use the full-page replay lab for the model games.
Artemiev–Vidit is the cleanest mating attack, while Artemiev–Hracek is the best classical event attack. Together they show how quickly Artemiev can turn pressure into a finish. Use the Vidit and Hracek diagrams together.
Use Artemiev’s games to study dynamic attacking play, fast decision-making and long technical conversion.