Online Chess is Actually Broken 😱

What if I told you that the world’s #1 bullet player isn’t a grandmaster… isn’t titled… and has been banned multiple times?

Meet Arkadiy Khromaev — the most controversial name in online chess today.


šŸ”„ The Hook

  • No GM title

  • No IM title

  • Ahead of Magnus, Hikaru, and everyone else — by over 100+ rating points on the live bullet leaderboard.

This guy is dominating in one of the fastest, most brutal formats in chess — and he’s doing it without the credentials we normally associate with world-class players.


🚨 The Wild Backstory

  • His account has been banned and unbanned multiple times.

  • Yet every time he comes back, he climbs straight back to #1.

  • All of this while remaining untitled and mostly unknown in the broader chess world.

It’s either the most underrated bullet prodigy ever…
Or it’s a sign that something in online chess is seriously broken.


šŸ¤” How Is This Even Possible?

In over-the-board chess, such a story would be unthinkable. Tournaments, arbiters, FIDE ratings — everything is structured.

Online chess? It’s chaos. It’s fast. And it’s open to everyone. That’s what makes it beautiful — and dangerous.

Here’s what Arkadiy’s rise tells us:

  • Online leaderboards don’t always reflect classical strength.

  • Anti-cheat systems still have gaps — especially in niche formats.

  • Talent in bullet doesn’t always come with titles or fame.


🧠 Why This Matters

Online chess is now the main arena for most players, especially younger ones. But when the top spot is surrounded by confusion, bans, and doubt — it affects everyone’s trust in the system.

Real FIDE tournaments? Still the gold standard.
Online chess? Incredible for growth, training, and speed — but it needs work.


šŸŽÆ Final Question

Is Arkadiy a legit bullet genius defying all norms?

Or is this a glitch in the matrix — proof that the online chess world still has serious bugs to fix?