
FIDE Grand Swiss 2025 Chess Round 4 LIVE Updates: Gukesh Dommaraju and Arjun Erigaisi, two of the strongest Indian grandmasters, are facing off in round 4 of the FIDE Grand Swiss tournament on Sunday. Gukesh, the youngest world champion in chess history, has opted for an Catalan Opening with white pieces against Arjun, who has also recently broken into the elusive 2800-ratings club.
The third member of India’s golden generation of chess prodigies, Praggnanandhaa, will also take on an Indian-origin American prodigy Abhimanyu Mishra after taking down chess legend Boris Gelfand in the previous round on Saturday. Abhimanyu Mishra is the world’s youngest grandmaster in chess history.
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In the interactive embeds below, you can follow all the top games involving Indian players from Grand Swiss today. You can also scroll past the interactives and read our live commentary and analysis of the games
INTERACTIVE: Gukesh Dommaraju vs Arjun Erigaisi
INTERACTIVE: Praggnanandhaa R vs Abhimanyu Mishra
INTERACTIVE: Vidit Santosh Gujrathi vs Vasyl Ivanchuk
INTERACTIVE: Divya Deshmukh vs Amin Bassem
INTERACTIVE: Vaishali Rameshbabu vs Dinara Wagner
INTERACTIVE: Vantika Agrawal vs Alexandra Kosteniuk
How Boris Gelfand lost to Praggnanandhaa in one single blunder

Chess legend Boris Gelfand reacts after noticing his blunder against Praggnanandhaa in the round 3 clash at the FIDE Grand Swiss tournament. (PHOTOS: FIDE YouTube)
After playing his 60th move with just one second left, Boris Gelfand calmly got up and walked away from the chessboard, leaving his young opponent R Praggnanandhaa to consider his next move in their third-round clash at the FIDE Grand Swiss tournament. Gelfand was relieved; he had just unlocked an additional 15 minutes on his clock by reaching the 60-move mark and had successfully matched his opponent for nearly six hours. But when he returned a few minutes later and saw Pragg’s response, his relief vanished, and he slumped into his chair as if he’d been hit with a knockout blow. Read Amit Kamath’s piece on how Gelfand’s blunder became Pragg’s gain
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