Dudin and Lazarne Vajda are 2025 Hungarian chess champions

by Carlos Alberto Colodro
12/19/2025 – The 2025 Hungarian National Individual Chess Championships took place in Budapest from 10 to 18 December, featuring open and women's events played as 10-player round-robins. Despite a few high-profile absences, both tournaments produced closely contested races. The open title went to 21-year-old Gleb Dudin, while the women's championship was decided on tiebreaks, with Szidonia Lazarne Vajda claiming her fourth national crown. | Photos: Hungarian Chess Federation

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A new champion in the open, a four-time champion in the women's competition

The 2025 Hungarian Individual Chess Championships, open and women's, were held in Budapest from 10 to 18 December. Both events were played as 10-player single round-robins. The fields consisted of eight invited players based on rating and two qualifiers who earned their places through a separate qualification tournament, which itself featured eight invited players under the age of 20.

The time control for all games was 90 minutes for 40 moves, followed by 30 minutes for the remainder of the game, with a 30-second increment from move one.

In the open championship, Hungary's two highest-rated players, Richard Rapport and Peter Leko, did not take part, though five players from the national top ten were present, including eight-time national champion Ferenc Berkes. Despite the experienced opposition, the tournament was won by 21-year-old Gleb Dudin, who claimed his first Hungarian Championship title.

Dudin finished outright first with an unbeaten score of 6½/9 points, scoring four wins and five draws. He maintained a narrow lead throughout the event and held his nerve in the final round, when his closest challengers, top seed Benjamin Gledura and Tamás Banusz, both had the white pieces but failed to convert their chances. Gledura and Banusz each finished on 6/9, half a point behind the champion. Dudin was born in Moscow and is currently studying at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley in the United States.

Gleb Dudin, Bendeguz Bodrogi

Gleb Dudin (right) facing Bendeguz Bodrogi with the black pieces

Benjamin Gledura

Benjamin Gledura grabbed second place

The women's championship was also affected by the absence of the country's two highest-rated players, Zsóka Gaál and Anita Gara. Even so, the event proved highly competitive, with the title decided only on tiebreaks. Second seed Szidonia Lazarne Vajda and fifth seed Kata Karacsonyi both finished on 6½/9 points, sharing first place on points.

The championship was awarded to Lazarne Vajda on Sonneborn–Berger tiebreak. At 46 years of age, she secured her fourth Hungarian Women's Championship title, having previously won in 2004, 2015 and last year, in 2024. Born in Odorheiu Secuiesc, Romania, Lazarne Vajda first represented Hungary at an Olympiad in 2002, and her latest success underlined her continued competitiveness at the highest national level.

Szidonia Lazarne Vajda

Four-time Hungarian women's chess champion Szidonia Lazarne Vajda

Kata Karacsonyi

Kata Karacsonyi

Final standings - Open

Final standings - Women's

All games - Open

All games - Women's

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Carlos Colodro is a Hispanic Philologist from Bolivia. He works as a freelance translator and writer since 2012. A lot of his work is done in chess-related texts, as the game is one of his biggest interests, along with literature and music.
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