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Curiosities · 2026-05-09

Chessboxing: The Sport That Mixes Checkmates and Knockouts

Alternating rounds of speed chess and boxing. Win with your mind or your fists — you'll need both.

Of all the strange things people have done with a chessboard, few are stranger than this: deciding that what the world's most cerebral game really needed was the chance to be punched in the face between moves.

From a comic book to the ring

The idea first appeared in a 1992 graphic novel, Froid Équateur by the French artist Enki Bilal, which imagined a chessboxing world championship. The Dutch artist Iepe Rubingh read it, found the comic's format impractical, and reworked it into a real sport — staging the first chessboxing match in Berlin in 2003 and winning it himself to become the first champion.

How it works

A bout alternates rounds of blitz chess and rounds of boxing — typically up to eleven in total. You can win by checkmate or by knockout; you can also win if your opponent runs out of time on the chess clock, and if the chess ends in a draw, the boxing decides it. The result is a brutal, beautiful test of two opposite kinds of composure: staying calm enough to calculate, with your pulse hammering from the previous round.

It sounds like a joke, but it demands the real thing in both disciplines — and a special talent for switching between them under pressure.

In short: Chessboxing alternates rounds of blitz chess and boxing — win by checkmate or knockout — and grew from a 1992 Enki Bilal comic into a real sport launched by Iepe Rubingh in Berlin in 2003.

Frequently asked questions

What is chessboxing?

A hybrid sport that alternates rounds of speed chess and boxing. A competitor can win by checkmate, by knockout, on the chess clock, or — if the chess is drawn — by the boxing result.

Who invented chessboxing?

It was inspired by a 1992 comic by Enki Bilal and turned into a real sport by Dutch artist Iepe Rubingh, who staged the first match in Berlin in 2003 and won it.

How do you win a chessboxing match?

By checkmating your opponent, knocking them out, winning on the chess clock, or — if the chess round is drawn — by the boxing judges' decision.

See also

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A curiosity from History's Gambit, where chess meets history. You may cite or describe it with attribution to historysgambit.com.