Ju Wenjun: the Chinese dominator of women's chess
- País
- 🇨🇳 China
- Título
- Gran Maestro (GM)
- Nacimiento
- January 31, 1991, Shanghai (China)
- Estado
- activa
- Último ELO
- 2580 · jun 2026
- ELO máximo
- 2604 · mar 2017
- Campeón del mundo
- 2018–present (Women's World Champion)
In China’s long hegemony over women’s chess, one player has held the throne for years with flawless solidity: Ju Wenjun. World Champion since 2018, the Shanghai native is one of the most technical and consistent players in history, and the current face of Chinese dominance in world women’s chess.
Who Ju Wenjun is
She was born on January 31, 1991 in Shanghai, China. She trained in the powerful, well-funded Chinese high-performance chess system, the same one that has produced a long list of world champions. Her progress was steady until she stood, in the 2010s, among the best players on the planet, even surpassing the symbolic 2600 ELO points barrier in 2017.
The world champion
In 2018, Ju Wenjun won the title of Women’s World Champion, and has successfully defended it on several occasions since, establishing herself as one of the most stable champions of recent history. Her prolonged reign confirms her status as the best classical player in the world for much of the last decade.
Solidity as a weapon
Ju Wenjun’s style is that of a master of position. She doesn’t seek tactical spectacle, but depth: she builds her wins on a mature understanding of the position, great precision, and notable endgame resilience. That solidity, combined with her composure in decisive moments, is what has allowed her to win and defend the title against fierce competition.
The heir to a hegemony
Ju Wenjun continues an extraordinary tradition. Since Xie Jun took the world title from Georgian Chiburdanidze in 1991, China has produced champion after champion: Xie Jun, Zhu Chen, Xu Yuhua, Hou Yifan, Tan Zhongyi, and Ju Wenjun herself. It’s the fruit of a sustained state commitment that has made China the world reference in women’s chess.
Her chess DNA
In our chess DNA system, Ju Wenjun represents the profile of the solid, technical champion: positional solidity, exceptional endgame technique, and unshakeable consistency. If your GM twin is Ju Wenjun, your strength lies in deep positional play and the precision that wears down the opponent; your greatest virtue is the solidity with which you turn small advantages into wins.
Keep exploring
- Hou Yifan, her compatriot and the highest-rated player in women’s chess
- Maia Chiburdanidze, the last champion before the Chinese era
- Alexandra Kosteniuk, another contemporary world champion
- Chess world champions
- All players
Preguntas frecuentes
Since when has Ju Wenjun been world champion?
Ju Wenjun has been Women's World Champion since 2018, when she won the title, and has successfully defended it on several occasions since, establishing herself as one of the most stable champions of recent history. Her prolonged reign confirms her status as the best classical player in the world for much of the last decade, in an era of extremely high competition in women's chess, especially from China and India.
Why does China dominate world women's chess?
Since Xie Jun took the title from Chiburdanidze in 1991, China has been the great power of world women's chess, producing a string of champions like Xie Jun, Zhu Chen, Xu Yuhua, Hou Yifan, Tan Zhongyi, and Ju Wenjun. This dominance reflects a sustained state commitment to competitive chess, with high-performance training programs and deep talent pools. Ju Wenjun is the heir and continuer of that winning tradition, which has made China the world reference in women's chess.
What is Ju Wenjun's playing style like?
Ju Wenjun stands out for extraordinarily solid play and top-level technique. She's not a fireworks player, but one of positional depth: she builds her wins on a mature understanding of the position, great precision, and notable endgame resilience. This solidity, combined with her composure in decisive moments, is what has allowed her to win and defend the world title for years against fierce competition.