Daniel Naroditsky, the American chess grandmaster and streamer who cultivated the game’s digital renaissance, has died aged 29. One of modern chess’s most respected teachers and commentators, he was familiar to many players from their computer screens, where he sat in big headphones behind a microphone, his shelves packed with chess books.
The ancient game has been transformed into an e-sport in recent years, driven by the emergence of talented players and personalities like Naroditsky, who livestream their matches and lessons on the internet.
A speed-chess specialist, he had an uncanny ability to simultaneously play and talk about playing, unpicking knotty positions in real time and with a novelist’s ear for animating the board. He liked to discuss the “fertile preconditions” for an attack, describing certain opening sequences as “zesty”, or a knight fighting to protect a bishop “with its last breath”.
Naroditsky, who went by Danya, was born on November 9 1995 in San Mateo, California. The son of immigrants from Ukraine and Azerbaijan, he learnt to play chess from his older brother when he was six years old.
“With chess it was almost this palpable electricity that I felt,” he explained. “You’re totally in control of your own fate. There’s no luck factor. It’s you and the pieces.” A prodigy, he won prestigious youth tournaments, including a California schools championship, grade-level national competitions and the under-12 world championship. Aged 18, he became a grandmaster, the game’s highest title. He graduated in history from Stanford University.
In hundreds of earnest and erudite videos, Naroditsky taught with the edge of an elite player and the humility of a friend. “Even grandmasters can get super sloppy,” he said. Attuned not only to strategy and tactics but also to pedagogy, he had a large virtual classroom — broadcasting to hundreds of thousands of subscribers on YouTube and Twitch. He wrote a column for Chess Life and offered puzzles based on historic games at the New York Times. As a teenager, he wrote two books, covering positional ideas and complex endgames.
Though it seemed to come easily to him, he was sympathetic about the game’s difficulty, particularly for beginners. “You need extreme patience because, more so than in any other game, you’re going to suck for a while,” he told the New York Times.

In 2020, Naroditsky moved to North Carolina. He served as a coach and “resident grandmaster” at the Charlotte Chess Center, teaching the area’s top junior players.
The Financial Times interviewed Naroditsky at the elite Candidates tournament in Madrid in 2022, where he was providing live commentary for Chess.com. Bubbly but tired, he had been up all night playing speed chess with one of the competitors.
In the final months of his life, Naroditsky was forced to battle insinuations of cheating levelled by the Russian former world champion Vladimir Kramnik. For two years, Kramnik has been engaged in an anti-cheating campaign that also ensnared other prominent chess figures.
“This is a sustained, evil and absolutely unhinged attempt to destroy my life,” Naroditsky said on a podcast last October. The game’s international governing body said this week it was investigating Kramnik, citing bullying as “a particularly serious concern”. Kramnik has denied wrongdoing. “I have not bullied Daniel Naroditsky, nor ever made personal insults towards him,” he told Reuters. Kramnik posted on X that he hoped the “real truth about the circumstances and cause of this tragedy will be revealed, despite all attempts to hide it”.
Fellow streamers and grandmasters mourned Naroditsky and celebrated his contributions to the game. Levy Rozman, the streamer known as GothamChess, described him as “exceptional” and “brilliant” and called for “justice”. Magnus Carlsen, the world number one, said he had spent many hours watching Naroditsky’s videos and called his death “a great loss”. The two played chess together on Carlsen’s wedding night.
He leaves behind a trove of recorded lessons and an enormous history of play — the Chess.com history for DanielNaroditsky contains 140,646 games.
Naroditksy was visibly distraught in his final livestream as he recounted the recent toll on him. Chess and his reputation, he said, were all he had. But in a video dated October 17, he began, “I’m back better than ever”, saying that after a creative break he was planning future content. Pulling a rare chess book off his shelf he launched into a history of the English and Sicilian openings. “Hopefully this is interesting,” he said. It was.
“Rest in peace Danya, the best chess teacher that the internet has ever seen,” reads one typical comment.