The Chess Tempo Chess Database provides over two million searchable chess games. The database can be searched via many criteria, including chess players, chess opening, player ratings, game result, and the year the chess game was played. Chess opening statistics can been viewed on the display to the right of the board. To search the chess database, either enter your criteria into the quick search box or use the advanced search by clicking on the advanced search label. To see the chess games in the database for the current position, click on the "Games for Position" tab. You can start from any position by using the paste FEN/moves button directly below the chess board. By default, the database only shows chess games where both players were rated over 2200, you can change the database subset using the database selector at the top of the page.

Search Chess Games

Searching in our Chess Games Database it's really easy! Select your search criteria like: player's name, ECO code or result, and you will get the resultant chess games in a second!


Download Chess Database Pgn


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Chess Puzzles

If you really want to improve your chess skills you should practice. And the funnest way of practicing is solving puzzles! Regular training sessions will boost your chess playing level.

Create your own Database

You can make your own chess games database and you can have the same tools we have developed for our own database. Analyzing your games with the Opening Explorer will boost your play learning how you perform on each line played!

Search & Browse the Masters Database

Now you'll be able to search and browse a database of games played by the Masters! In our Big Database you'll find more of 3.5 million interesting games played by all kind of players. But if you want only the games featuring world's best players, the Masters Database is for you. Start learning from the Masters right now!

Unlimited Chess Puzzles

Supporters get unlimited access to the problems in the database. Train your tactical ability, exercise your calculating skills and candidate moves evaluation.

Next you'll need an analysis engine. Houdini 1.5a has long been the strongest free chess engine available, but I've recently read that the newest version of Stockfish is stronger (though the CCRL still puts Houdini 1.5a ahead). Since SCID supports several analysis engines you can install both if you like.

The ICOPY database includes a whopping 4.6 million games, with a 2/16/2013 update available. There's obviously going to be a lot of overlap between these, but I don't know yet if ICOPY includes all the games in Millionbase.

The biggest online chess database with over 9 million games is now available on Chessify for free. We've collected professional chess games from the late 1500s to the most recent tournaments of 2022 to present you with the biggest chess database online.

To use a similar database on your chess GUI program, you would've needed to spend around $200, while at Chessify, you only need to create a free account. We are going to update our database weekly, so you will always have access to the latest games.

The database feature is still in the Beta development phase and will be improved throughout the month. We appreciate your patience and support. If you detect any kind of problems, please report them to info@chessify.me and help us improve the database faster.

With our Opening Explorer you can browse our entire chess database move by move obtaining statistics about the results of each possible continuation. 

The Opening Explorer is a great tool if you want to study chess openings.

For those who have been primarily using lichess/chess.com, and want to dig into chess a bit further, having a database can be extremely useful. It is to me, at least. And in 2018, your path to a high quality set up is actually pretty easy and relatively inexpensive (and potentially free).

SCID or SCIDvPC. This is an open source chess database, available for free. From what I understand, SCIDvPC and SCIDvMac are both later versions of SCID with more features. SCIDvMac is the one I've tried.

EDIT: u/PossibleOatmeal correctly pointed out that SCIDvPC/Mac is a fork of SCID, but that they serve different purposes. SCID is more focused on chess database features, and SCIDvPC/Mac is focused more on UI and engine v. engine matches. Both free, so no reason not to try out both and see if they work for you.

Note: This will work on the mac under an emulator, and there are lots of ways to emulate a PC on a Mac. VMWare, Parallels, VirtualBox, etc. I like VMWare myself, but personally, didn't want to have to load it up every time I wanted to use my chess database.

3) Hiarcs Chess Explorer - this is a pretty under-rated chess database imho. I chose this one because I'm on a Mac and it's the only commercial database available for Mac that runs natively. But that said, it is quite good, has a lot of great features, and I like it a lot. Base version is $50. The "Deep" version with endgame tables and multi-processor support is $100, and you can also subscribe to their professional tournament opening book (which I have tried, and I do like).

If you download the 3 collections I mentioned, you now have millions of games at your disposal. Chessbase has their Megabase product which only works with Chessbase and has a lot more games, but I honestly haven't yet felt like I'm missing anything critical from the free set that I have. For what I'm using it for, the free ones have been more than enough so far. If anyone has used both Megabase and the free databases, feel free to comment on the differences in the comments.

But you will get a complete analysis out of the engines using any of these systems. Also, adding comments, multiple lines, exploring openings, etc is standard functionality for all of these as well. I think anyone who is striving to be a serious chess student should have at least one of these set ups.

I am using SCID as an alternative to Chessbase and have been using it for analysis and doing some prep. I have Cassiabase's masters database, which is good for knowing theory and seeing what high level players do, but I'm about 1000 elo points (USCF) below these masters, and I want to get a sense of common choices made by players in my rating range for certain openings. Is there a database online that has games from amateur/club level players I could load in SCID? Thanks!

Hi, I've downloaded a PGN chess database of around 1.2 million games from CCRL (chess engine games), with an uncompressed size of 1.4 GB. For some reason I can't seem to able to import the whole database to SCID. It reads the PGN file just fine but only imports around 262k games with a message saying the maximum number of games for that type of database had been reached.

Anyone has any idea what it means by 'this type of database' and how to resolve this? As far as I can tell it's just a regular PGN database, I was able to open it without any issue in Shredder 13. thanks

Hi everyone, I just want to know how people on newer Macs cope with the sparse landscape of usable software out there. I have been using lichess studies extensively but have been running up against its limitations recently (64 games etc). I have used (and loved) SCID vs Mac in the past, but unfortunately the 64bit variant is useless on newer Macs (super buggy and slow). ChessX is also a mixed bag: frequent crashes, slow database search (pgn only) and frequent bugs. I am now looking at the two remaining options: HIARCS Chess Explorer Pro (for larger databases and Chessbase format) or going with Chessbase and Virtualization. Both come in at the same pricepoint (add tax to basic version of HIARCS and Chessbase 16 Steam Edition). In theory Chessbase runs in Paralles on an M1 (some evidence towards that in other threads), though a native experience would be obviously nicer. HIARCS looks good, but it is based on ChessX if I am correct, and that was really not great. It is a shame that there is no Demo. I am just wondering if spending that kind of money, I should just go for Chessbase directly and put up with the added layer of Virtualization or just opt for HIARCS (all the added features of Chessbase and wider support in the community etc being a factor)? I also have the option of just using an old laptop with windows too. Let me know what your experiences and solutions are!

I'm currently around 1950 to 2000, and starting to engage in some real hardcore opening theory. Usually, I'll study the theory via some sort of book or YouTube channel and then replay various games over-the-board. The issue I'm struggling with is consistently finding Classical Time Format games within a database, especially on my phone or tablet.

I have a Chess.com diamond membership and a Chessbase account. The issue with chess.com, as it's filled with Blitz/Rapid games, and I'm only looking for classical. Chessbase has an incredible collection, but they also do not separate.

A series of recent works studying a database of chronologically sorted chess games-containing 1.4 million games played by humans between 1998 and 2007- have shown that the popularity distribution of chess game-lines follows a Zipf's law, and that time series inferred from the sequences of those game-lines exhibit long-range memory effects. The presence of Zipf's law together with long-range memory effects was observed in several systems, however, the simultaneous emergence of these two phenomena were always studied separately up to now. In this work, by making use of a variant of the Yule-Simon preferential growth model, introduced by Cattuto et al., we provide an explanation for the simultaneous emergence of Zipf's law and long-range correlations memory effects in a chess database. We find that Cattuto's Model (CM) is able to reproduce both, Zipf's law and the long-range correlations, including size-dependent scaling of the Hurst exponent for the corresponding time series. CM allows an explanation for the simultaneous emergence of these two phenomena via a preferential growth dynamics, including a memory kernel, in the popularity distribution of chess game-lines. This mechanism results in an aging process in the chess game-line choice as the database grows. Moreover, we find burstiness in the activity of subsets of the most active players, although the aggregated activity of the pool of players displays inter-event times without burstiness. We show that CM is not able to produce time series with bursty behavior providing evidence that burstiness is not required for the explanation of the long-range correlation effects in the chess database. Our results provide further evidence favoring the hypothesis that long-range correlations effects are a consequence of the aging of game-lines and not burstiness, and shed light on the mechanism that operates in the simultaneous emergence of Zipf's law and long-range correlations in a community of chess players. e24fc04721

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