HomeChessBullet Brawl June 13, 2026: Nakamura Wins 10th Bullet Brawl Of 2026,...

Bullet Brawl June 13, 2026: Nakamura Wins 10th Bullet Brawl Of 2026, Maintains Perfect Record


GM Hikaru Nakamura, the undisputed king of Bullet Brawl, pulled off another comprehensive victory on Saturday, gaining his 10th title in as many appearances in 2026. Nakamura finished with 182 points, 42 points clear of GM Oleksandr Bortnyk, and a further nine ahead of the third and fourth place-getters, IM Renato Terry and GM Dmitry Andreikin.

While Nakamura fell short of posting another 200+ score, the result was never seriously in doubt as he powered through the 194-player titled field with 53 wins, six draws, and just 10 losses.

Nakamura will receive $400 for the win, while Bortnyk, Terry, and Andreikin will receive $250, $150, and $100, respectively. Meanwhile, Georgian IM Meri Arabidze picked up the $100 best women’s prize.

Standings

Rank Fed Title Username Name Rating Score Longest Streak
1 GM Hikaru Hikaru Nakamura 3443 182 13
2 GM Oleksandr_Bortnyk Oleksandr Bortnyk 3296 140 9
3 IM MITerryble Renato Terry 3225 131 9
4 GM FairChess_on_YouTube Dmitry Andreikin 3230 131 5
5 GM jefferyx Jeffery Xiong 3204 128 9
6 GM Indianlad S.L. Narayanan 3158 126 8
7 GM dropstoneDP David Paravyan 3158 126 7
8 IM yosephtaher Yoseph Theolifus Taher 3169 126 6
9 GM Sina-Movahed Sina Movahed 3105 121 5
10 GM Msb2 Matthias Bluebaum 3177 120 12
11 IM FaustinoOro Faustino Oro 3146 118 6
12 GM Sanan_Sjugirov Sanan Sjugirov 2956 117 5
13 GM rasmussvane Rasmus Svane 3102 116 5
14 IM Bryanl106 Bryan Enming Lin 3025 111 6
15 GM OhanyanEminChess Emin Ohanyan 3157 109 8
16 IM Turboplombir Sergey Sklokin 3043 107 6
17 IM chess_master_8820 Radin Yadegar 3043 106 7
18 IM ToivoK3 Toivo Keinänen 3074 106 5
19 FM yavrukurt40 Dincer Tasdogen 3102 103 6
20 CM TurkishWunderkind Sayyid Usmon Shamsuddin 2874 102 5

(Full final standings here.)

With plenty of established Bullet Brawl regulars in the fray on Saturday, Nakamura had to work hard to bulldoze his way to the top. GMs Matthias Bluebaum, Jeffery Xiong, David Paravyan, and Narayanan S.L. were some of the elite speedsters the American had to overcome, as well as the aforementioned place-getters.

Naryanan was the highest-scoring Indian player and just missed out on the prizes with a sixth-place finish. Photo: Maria Emelianova/Chess.com.

Xiong, in particular, was a menace—the world number-60 kicked off the arena with 14.5/15 and employed his trademark Orangutan Opening (also known as the Polish or Sokolsky) in each of his games with White.

Following the streak, Xiong was unable to keep up the heroics, perhaps owing to a lopsided 3/10 score against Nakamura.

Xiong 3-7 Nakamura.

Bluebaum was another player whose punchy start made him a threat; however, four consecutive losses to Nakamura, Paravyan, Narayanan, and Terry shattered his momentum. 

Bluebaum strove for his second Bullet Brawl title on Saturday but couldn’t keep up with Nakamura. Photo: Michal Walusza/FIDE.

As has so often been the case in 2026, Bortnyk emerged as Nakamura’s closest challenger after the Ukrainian star scored 10.5/12 in the first quarter and kept up the pace. Against Serbian FM Djuro Skaric, Bortnyk needed just 17 moves to procure a nine-point material advantage and prompt his opponent’s resignation.

Naturally, the 10 games between Nakamura and Bortnyk became the focal point of the arena, and although the now 59-time winner scored a commanding 7.5/10, many of the games could’ve swung either way if not for Bortnyk often facing a time deficit.

A few extra seconds in one game gave Nakamura the means to flag Bortnyk in an equal bishop endgame.

In one such clash, Bortnyk could have won a rook with tactics but cruelly would have likely lost on time even if he did.

In another, Nakamura tricked Bortnyk into playing 25…Qxd3?? before uncorking a decisive zwischenzug.

Having dealt with most of his would-be rivals personally, Nakamura garnered a 15-point buffer at the top just over an hour into the event, and much like in previous weeks, he extended this lead with an indomitable 13-game streak.

Nakamura’s accuracy score was over 90% in all but three of his games in the streak.

The final game, which was a clean, 25-move victory over Germany GM Rasmus Svane, epitomized the consistency and meticulousness that have helped Nakamura maintain his supremacy in the format.

The American superstar has truly turned Bullet Brawl into his personal playground. Based on current form, his rivals will need something special to halt his march toward yet another title next Saturday.

All-Time Leaderboard

Player All-Time Wins 2026 Wins 2025 Wins 2024 Wins 2023 Wins
GM Hikaru Nakamura 59 10 15 19 15
GM Daniel Naroditsky 32 N/A 8 14 10
GM Oleksandr Bortnyk 17 4 3 7 3
GM Andrew Tang 15 1 10 4 0
GM Ediz Gurel 9 1 6 2 0
GM Jose Martinez 4 0 0 1 3
GM Arjun Erigaisi 3 3 0 0 0
IM Renato Terry 3 3 0 0 0
GM Yagiz Erdogmus 3 1 1 1 0
GM Nihal Sarin 3 0 1 0 2
GM Jeffery Xiong 2 0 2 0 0
GM Sam Sevian 2 0 1 1 0
GM Alireza Firouzja 2 0 1 1 0
GM Andy Woodward 1 1 0 0 0
GM Matthias Bluebaum 1 0 1 0 0
GM Tuan Minh Le 1 0 0 1 0
IM Yoseph Taher 1 0 0 1 0
IM Reza Mahdavi 1 0 1 0 0
GM Javokhir Sindarov 1 0 1 0 0

How to review games?
The games from this week’s Bullet Brawl can be found here.

Bullet Brawl is an exciting arena featuring Chess.com’s top bullet specialists. It takes place weekly on Saturdays. The format is a two-hour arena with a 1+0 time control; the prize fund is $1,000. Like Titled Tuesday and Arena Kings, Bullet Brawl often features top GMs, including Hikaru Nakamura, Andrew Tang, Tuan Minh Le, and many more!


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