One of America’s most gifted chess minds — a player, teacher, and voice who brought millions into the beauty of the game — has died far too soon.
Daniel Naroditsky, the chess grandmaster and beloved online educator affectionately known as “Danya,” passed away at just 29 years old. His death was confirmed by the Charlotte Chess Center in North Carolina, where he served as head coach and mentor to countless students. The center called him “a talented chess player, educator, and beloved member of the chess community.”
His family released a brief statement asking that he be remembered “for his passion and love for the game.” No cause of death has yet been made public.
To fans worldwide, Naroditsky wasn’t simply another grandmaster — he was the gentle, witty presence who turned late-night chess streams into moments of magic. On YouTube and Twitch, where he taught and played under the name Danya, his calm explanations and infectious enthusiasm drew in hundreds of thousands. He made even the most complex endgames feel like stories worth telling.
“He loved streaming, and he loved trying to be educational,” said fellow grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura, holding back tears during a tribute livestream. “The chess world is very grateful.”
A Lifelong Student of the Game
Born in San Mateo, California, in 1995 to Jewish immigrant parents — a mathematician father from Ukraine and a pianist mother from Azerbaijan — Naroditsky first learned chess from his older brother, Alan.
“It wasn’t love at first sight,” he once told *The New York Times.* “It was a gradual process. A lot of my best memories are just doing stuff with my brother.”
That gradual love soon became brilliance. By age nine, he was the top-ranked U.S. player in his age group. At eleven, he captured the World Youth Championship (Under-12) title in Turkey. By eighteen, he was already a grandmaster — and one of the youngest published chess authors in the world with his book Mastering Positional Chess.
After earning his degree from Stanford University in 2019, Naroditsky moved to Charlotte, North Carolina, to dedicate himself to teaching. There, he became a cornerstone of America’s modern chess renaissance, inspiring players young and old through both in-person instruction and digital media.
A Teacher First, Always
Ranked among the top 200 classical players globally, Naroditsky was equally known for his dominance in fast-paced “blitz” and “bullet” formats. Just this past August, he captured the U.S. Blitz Championship with a flawless 14–0 record — an achievement that solidified his reputation as one of the most formidable minds in the game.
But his greatest strength, friends say, wasn’t his precision over the board — it was his ability to make chess feel human.
With more than 800,000 followers across platforms, he became one of the first true digital ambassadors of chess. International master Levy Rozman, known online as GothamChess, said, “He could explain the game to an ant. He existed at the perfect crossroads of playing brilliantly and explaining brilliantly.”
Beyond streaming, Naroditsky also contributed puzzles and commentary for The New York Times, often emphasizing that even grandmasters never stop learning.
“Even at my level,” he said in 2022, “I can still discover beautiful things about the game every single time I train, teach, play, or commentate.”
Remembered for His Kindness
Those who knew him personally describe a man of quiet humor, generosity, and humility. Danny Rensch of Chess.com called him “more than an amazing, inspirational face of our game — he was a friend and brother.”
Grandmaster Oleksandr Bortnyk, one of his closest friends, broke down during a memorial stream.
“He was a very good guy. A very kind guy,”* Bortnyk said through tears. “My last words to him were, ‘Danya, don’t worry about anything. I love you so much.’”
In his final YouTube video, posted just days before his passing, Naroditsky smiled into the camera and said, “You thought I was gone!? I’m back, better than ever.”
A Legacy Beyond the Board
On Monday, as the U.S. Chess Championship in St. Louis began its eighth round, players stood in silence to honor him. The International Chess Federation (FIDE) released a statement calling his death “a devastating loss to the global chess community.”
Daniel Naroditsky is survived by his mother, Lena, and his brother, Alan. His father, Vladimir, passed away in 2019.
He will be remembered not only as a grandmaster, but as a teacher who made milli