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67 hours of non-stop chess: the World Record Chess Marathon begins in Lima

by Sagar Shah - 25/06/2026

Lima, Peru - From 25 to 28 June 2026, the Sheraton Lima becomes the stage for one of the most unusual chess festivals of the year. Eight tournaments, elite simultaneous exhibitions, a top showdown, US$100,000 prize fund and a clock that essentially never stops for four days and nights for chess. Here is everything you need to know about the World Record Chess Marathon.



A total prize fund of US$100,000 (approx Rs.94,66,000)

There are chess festivals, and then there is a chess marathon. WR Chess - the company founded by Wadim Rosenstein, the same group behind the Women's Chess Tour and Magnus Carlsen's recent appearance at the ASEAN E-Sports Chess Cup in Bangkok - has chosen Lima for an event built around a simple, slightly mad idea: play almost without pause for roughly 67 hours!

The World Record event in Lima, Peru is the brainchild of Wadim Rosenstein

From Thursday 25th June to Sunday 28th June, the Sheraton Lima will host eight separate ranked tournaments stacked back-to-back, day and night, alongside grandmaster simuls, a "Beat the GM" handicap challenge, and a headline exhibition match. The blitz events literally run through the night - 11:00 p.m. to 9:00 a.m. - and the moment one tournament finishes, the next is already being set up. For four days, Lima will be a city that plays chess during the day and also during night!

Entry is free, it is open to players of all ages and nationalities, and there is more than US $100,000 on the table. Below is the full picture.

The headline act: Faustino Oro vs José Martínez

The marquee attraction kicks the festival off on the very first afternoon (25 June, 2-4 p.m): a six-game exhibition match between two of the most-watched names in online and over-the-board chess. Faustino Oro - the 12-year-old Argentine phenomenon the world knows as the "Messi of Chess." Born in Buenos Aires on 14 October 2013, Oro has spent the last three years demolishing age records: youngest to 2300, the first 11-year-old in history to cross 2500, a viral online bullet win over Magnus Carlsen at the age of ten, and a run to the second round of the FIDE World Cup as a twelve-year-old. On 9 May 2026 he completed his GM title at 12 years, 6 months and 26 days - the second-youngest GM in history, behind only Abhimanyu Mishra. He arrives in Lima as one of the hottest talents on the planet.

One of the biggest talents in the world of chess Faustino Oro will be in Lima, Peru | Photo: Michal Walusza/FIDE

In the other corner, José Eduardo Martínez Alcántara - "Jospem" to his hundreds of thousands of followers. Born in Lima in 1999 and now representing Mexico, the 27-year-old is one of the strongest speed-chess players in the Americas, a Titled Tuesday regular, an U-18 World Champion back in 2017, and a familiar face to anyone who follows online blitz. For Martínez this is a genuine homecoming, returning to the city where he learned the game as a youngster.

Jose Martinez made it to the headlines in 2025 when he reached the Quarter Finals of the FIDE World Cup 2025 | Photo: Lennart Ootes

It will be 2 rapid games (15+0) followed by 4 blitz games (3+0). The winner takes US $6,000, the runner-up US $4,000, with the purse split if they finish level. It is not FIDE-rated.

Eight tournaments, three formats, one continuous grind

The competitive heart of the marathon is a set of 8 tournaments - 2 rapids, 3 blitz and 3 bughouse events. Players can enter as many as they like, and a single overall Grand Prix ties them all together.

  • Blitz (3 events, FIDE-rated): 5 minutes + 2 seconds, played as 12 double-rounds - 24 games a night - running overnight from 11:00 p.m. to 9:00 a.m. This is the true marathon shift and staying up all night to win this will require immense stamina.

  • Rapid (2 events, FIDE-rated): 10 minutes + 2 seconds, nine rounds each, played in the friendlier morning-to-afternoon slot (10 a.m. to 4 p.m.)

  • Bughouse (3 team events): the wild card of the festival. Two-player teams, 5 minutes with no increment, captured pieces passed to your partner to be dropped back on the board. WR Chess has added a delightful twist of its own - a "Promised Promotion" rule. When a pawn reaches the last rank, instead of a normal promotion a player may declare a piece ("Queen!", "Rook!", "Knight!", "Bishop!"), which then lets their partner instantly remove a piece of that type from the opponent's board. Communication between teammates is encouraged, in any language, and the noise levels in the bughouse hall should be something to behold.

A few practical notes for anyone thinking of playing: registration is free and done through the official website, blitz and rapid require a FIDE ID (bughouse does not), each tournament is capped at 400 players. The arbiter's team is led by IA Gerhard Bertagnolli and numbers more than fifteen officials - you will surely need them when the boards are running all night.

Here is a player's list for one of the events:

No.

 

Name

FideID

FED

Rtg

sex

Typ

1

GM

Martinez Alcantara, Jose Eduardo

3805662

MEX

2663

2

GM

Cori, Jorge

3802272

PER

2607

3

IM

Terry, Renato

3803457

PER

2572

4

GM

Quesada Perez, Luis Ernesto

3520773

MEX

2569

5

GM

Salinas Herrera, Pablo

3407128

CHI

2529

6

GM

Vasquez Schroeder, Rodrigo

3400042

CHI

2517

S50

7

GM

Henriquez Villagra, Cristobal

3409350

CHI

2506

8

GM

Cori Quispe, Kevin Joel

3814017

MEX

2466

9

FM

Arrieta Hernandez, Cristian

4455207

COL

2464

10

IM

Ticona Rocabado, Licael Roderick

3319113

BOL

2459

U18

11

GM

Raja, Harshit

5089000

IND

2455

12

IM

Rojas Salas, Steven

3819434

PER

2429

13

GM

Barrientos, Sergio E

4401824

COL

2408

14

IM

Araujo Sanchez, Josue

6416896

DOM

2405

15

IM

Plotkin, Mark

2611651

CAN

2387

16

IM

Quirhuayo Chumbe, German Gonzalo

3813509

PER

2372

17

IM

Gemy, Jose Daniel

3301478

BOL

2356

18

Calcina, Gary

3803120

PER

2291

19

FM

Reyes Zavaleta, Fabian Ricardo

3844153

PER

2283

U20

20

IM

Cori T., Deysi

3801934

PER

2249

w

Complete List

It will be exciting to see GM Harshit Raja in action! He plans to play all the events at this marathon!

The GM Programme: simuls and "Beat the Grandmaster"

Across all four days, a rotating cast of world-class grandmasters will take on the public in two formats.

The simultaneous exhibitions see a GM play 15 to 25 opponents at once. At the end of each simul the GM picks up to five games they most enjoyed (win, lose or draw - quality is what counts), and each of those opponents pockets US $100.

Then there is "Beat the Grandmaster", a handicap blitz where the GM is given just 60 seconds while the challenger gets a comfortable 5 minutes. Beat the grandmaster and you earn US $50, with up to ten such scalps available per session. It is the kind of David-versus-Goliath format that produces the videos that go viral the next morning.

Some of the GMs who would be present and giving a simul are Leinier Dominguez, Peruvian legend Julio Granda and many more.

The prize fund

The festival carries a total prize fund of US $100,000, distributed as follows:

  • US $6,500 across the GM simuls and the "Beat the Grandmaster" handicap challenge.

  • The remainder shared across the eight tournaments — each Blitz and Rapid event offers US $12,000 (US $3,000 to the winner, paying down to 10th place, with rating-band and dedicated women's prizes), and each Bughouse event offers US $5,000 (US$2000 to the winner).

  • An overall Grand Prix worth US $18,500, awarded on points accumulated across all eight tournaments, with US $7,000 to the overall champion.

The prize fund for the Bughouse, Rapid and Blitz

Grand Prix prizes!

On top of that sits the US $10,000 headline match between Oro and Martínez.

There is one more prize worth its own paragraph. The best female player from South America across the two Rapid tournaments wins a Wild Card to the WR Women's Chess Tour - Americas leg in Punta Cana, Dominican Republic (30 June–3 July). For the region's leading women, this weekend is also a gateway to the next stop on the global circuit.

The players who have already confirmed for the Women's Grand Prix in Punta Cana

The schedule at a glance (Lima time)

How to follow

WR Chess will be streaming the festival on its YouTube channel, with the broadcast schedule following the rounds above. Pairings and live standings will be posted on chess-results, and the organisers are active on Instagram (@wrchessofficial) and the rest of their social channels.

The tournament director is GM Sebastian Siebrecht, and the organising team is anchored by IM Martha Fierro, who has spoken of the 67-hour concept as the centre piece of the whole idea - chess that simply refuses to stop.

Whether you are here to watch a 12-year-old grandmaster, to take a free swing at beating Leinier Dominguez in a simul or in a one-minute handicap game, or just to find out what a chessboard looks like at four in the morning, Lima is about to become the most relentless chess city on earth. Let the marathon begin.

A small note on how we got from India to Lima

It took us close to 24 hours to reach from Mumbai to Lima. We took a 1.30 a.m. flight from Mumbai to Paris. We reached Paris around 8 a.m. and our flight to Lima was at 10 a.m. After landing in Lima at around 4.30 p.m. we waited for our luggage, immigration and other procedures and eventually reached the hotel - the Lima Sheraton at 6.30 p.m.

During our small stopover I managed to record one commentary video

The ChessBase India team arrives in Lima - Sagar Shah, Amruta Mokal, Abhyudaya Ram (Harshit bhai is missing!)

At the Lima airport we met the ever smiling Fiona Steil-Antoni





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