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Kasparov vs Karpov (1984–1990)

Five World Championship matches. Tiny margins. Huge stakes. Use the game explorer below to replay famous battles on the board.

In one sentence: Anatoly Karpov was the established champion, Garry Kasparov was the challenger, and their World Championship battles became the defining rivalry of modern elite chess.

Epic Encounters: replay famous games from the 1985 match

Pick a game and step through the moves. These are decisive results from the 1985 World Championship match.


World Championship match results (1984–1990)

These are the five title matches between them. The scores show just how close the rivalry stayed for years.

Match Location Format Final score Why it matters
1984–85 Moscow First to 6 wins (unfinished) Stopped without a winner Marathon match ended early; decision remains controversial
1985 Moscow 24 games (champion keeps title if tied) Kasparov 13–11 Kasparov becomes World Champion
1986 London & Leningrad 24 games Kasparov 12.5–11.5 Another razor-thin win
1987 Seville 24 games (tie keeps champion) 12–12 Last-game drama decided the title
1990 New York & Lyon 24 games Kasparov 12.5–11.5 The final title match between them

What to notice when you replay these games

Style clashPressure

Control vs dynamism

Karpov’s best games often look calm on the surface, but every move tightens the position. Kasparov’s best games often build energy quickly and then explode with tactics.

PreparationEndurance

Tiny margins decide everything

In these matches, one slip can be fatal — but so can one missed chance. The best way to feel this is to replay the games and notice where the plan changes.

Turning pointsMomentum

A match is a long story

A single win can change the mood of a match. A single mistake can change a player’s next opening choice. These games make more sense when you view them as connected battles.

PracticalHuman

The psychology is real

When the same two players meet again and again, confidence and fear become part of the position. That’s why the last games of a match are often the most tense.


1985 match: opening codes (quick reference)

A compact lookup for the most searched games from the 1985 match.

Game White Black Result ECO
Game 4KarpovKasparov1-0D31
Game 5KasparovKarpov0-1C92
Game 11KasparovKarpov1-0E21
Game 16KarpovKasparov0-1B44
Game 24KarpovKasparov0-1B84

Common questions

Rivalry basics

Who won Kasparov vs Karpov overall?

Garry Kasparov won the World Championship rivalry overall, although the margin stayed narrow across multiple matches. Review the World Championship match results table and replay the featured games above to see how small swings decided such a huge rivalry.

What was the overall Kasparov vs Karpov match record?

Kasparov won three World Championship matches, one match ended 12–12 with Kasparov retaining the title, and the 1984–85 match was stopped without a winner. Use the results table on this page to compare each match one by one instead of treating the rivalry as a single headline.

How many World Championship matches did Kasparov and Karpov play?

Kasparov and Karpov played five World Championship matches between 1984 and 1990. Use the match results section as a quick timeline and then replay the 1985 games above to study the match that changed chess history.

How many World Championship games did Kasparov and Karpov play against each other?

Kasparov and Karpov played 144 World Championship games across their five title matches from 1984 to 1990. Use the match table and replay explorer here to turn that big number into a clearer story of momentum, recovery, and match pressure.

Why is Kasparov vs Karpov considered the greatest chess rivalry?

Kasparov vs Karpov is often considered the greatest chess rivalry because it combined repeated World Championship matches, contrasting styles, and tiny margins under extreme pressure. Replay the featured games above and compare them with the match results table to see why this rivalry still defines elite championship chess.

What made the Kasparov vs Karpov rivalry so special?

The rivalry was special because the same two players kept meeting at the very top while bringing opposite strengths to nearly every battle. Read the What to notice section and replay the selected games above to follow how control and dynamism kept colliding over years.

Who was Kasparov’s biggest rival?

Anatoly Karpov was Kasparov’s biggest rival because they fought five World Championship matches and pushed each other to the limit again and again. Review the results timeline and replay explorer on this page to see why no other opponent shaped Kasparov’s career in quite the same way.

Was Karpov better than Kasparov?

At different stages, yes, because Karpov was the established champion before Kasparov reached his peak and Kasparov later became the stronger long-term title holder. Replay the featured games above to compare how the balance of power shifted across the rivalry.

Who was stronger, Karpov or Kasparov?

Kasparov reached the stronger overall career peak, but Karpov was strong enough to keep their championship matches extraordinarily close. Use the replay explorer and match table together to study why the gap between them was much smaller than many quick summaries imply.

How close was the Kasparov vs Karpov rivalry?

The rivalry was extremely close, with repeated title matches decided by tiny margins and one championship finishing 12–12. Study the score lines in the match table and then replay the featured games above to feel how narrow the difference often was over the board.

1984 and 1985 turning points

Why was the 1984 World Championship match stopped without a winner?

The 1984 match was stopped because it used a first-to-six-wins format, dragged on for months, and FIDE ended it with neither player having reached six wins. Review the results table here to place that controversy in context before moving into the later replayable games.

Was the 1984 Karpov vs Kasparov match the longest chess match ever?

The 1984 Karpov vs Kasparov match is one of the longest and most famous marathon title matches in chess history, lasting 48 games before it was stopped. Use the match results section on this page to compare that unfinished struggle with the shorter matches that followed.

Did the 1984 match help Kasparov in the long run?

Many chess historians believe the stopped 1984 match helped Kasparov in the long run because he survived the ordeal, learned from it, and returned stronger in 1985. Replay the 1985 games above to see how much more confident and dangerous his play looked afterward.

Who won the 1985 World Championship match, Kasparov or Karpov?

Garry Kasparov won the 1985 World Championship match by 13–11 and became World Champion for the first time. Use the match table for the result and replay Games 11, 16, and 24 above to study the key victories that shaped the match.

Why is the 1985 Kasparov vs Karpov match so important?

The 1985 match is so important because it gave Kasparov the world title and turned a tense challenger-champion clash into a historic long-term rivalry. Use the Epic Encounters replay explorer above to follow the decisive games move by move instead of only reading the final score.

Did Kasparov beat Karpov in 1985?

Yes, Kasparov beat Karpov in the 1985 World Championship match and finished two points ahead at 13–11. Check the 1985 row in the match results table and then replay the selected 1985 games above to see how he got over the line.

Style, learning, and study value

What is the difference between Karpov and Kasparov’s style?

Karpov’s style was more restrictive and positional, while Kasparov’s style was more dynamic, forceful, and initiative-driven. Read the What to notice section and replay the games above to compare control versus energy in real championship positions.

How did Kasparov beat Karpov?

Kasparov beat Karpov by combining opening preparation, dynamic play, and the ability to seize the initiative when the position became sharp. Replay the selected games above to watch how pressure builds gradually and then suddenly becomes decisive.

What can you learn from Kasparov vs Karpov games?

Kasparov vs Karpov games teach planning, match psychology, style clashes, opening preparation, and the value of small advantages at elite level. Use the replay explorer and the What to notice section together to turn those lessons into something concrete and practical.

Why are Kasparov vs Karpov games still studied today?

Kasparov vs Karpov games are still studied because they combine historical importance with rich examples of strategy, defence, initiative, and championship tension. Replay the featured games here to see why this rivalry still feels modern rather than merely historical.

Which Kasparov vs Karpov games should I start with?

A strong place to start is with Games 11, 16, and 24 from the 1985 match because they show tactics, strategy, and match-defining pressure. Use the Epic Encounters selector above to step through those games in a logical study path.

What should I notice when replaying Kasparov vs Karpov games?

Notice how small positional decisions often shape the whole game long before the final tactic or blunder appears. Read the What to notice section first and then replay the games above to track those slow turning points more clearly.

Where can I watch Kasparov vs Karpov games move by move?

You can watch Kasparov vs Karpov games move by move using the Epic Encounters replay explorer on this page. Select a game above and step through the moves to follow the critical moments instead of only seeing the result.

1985 ECO codes and common lookups

What are the ECO codes for the featured 1985 Kasparov vs Karpov games?

The featured 1985 games on this page use ECO codes D31, C92, E21, B44, and B84. Use the 1985 match opening codes quick reference section to connect each famous game to its opening family at a glance.

What was the ECO code for Kasparov vs Karpov 1985 Game 1?

This page’s 1985 quick reference section does not list Game 1, so the ECO code for Game 1 is not provided in the on-page table. Use the opening codes quick reference here for the listed games and compare it against the featured replay collection above.

What was the ECO code for Kasparov vs Karpov 1985 Game 4?

The ECO code for Kasparov vs Karpov 1985 Game 4 was D31. Use the 1985 match opening codes quick reference section to confirm that code and place it beside the other featured games.

What was the ECO code for Kasparov vs Karpov 1985 Game 5?

The ECO code for Kasparov vs Karpov 1985 Game 5 was C92. Use the 1985 match opening codes quick reference section to connect that game to the wider opening pattern across the featured 1985 examples.

What was the ECO code for Kasparov vs Karpov 1985 Game 11?

The ECO code for Kasparov vs Karpov 1985 Game 11 was E21. Replay Game 11 in the explorer above and then check the 1985 opening codes table to tie the mating finish to its opening label.

What was the ECO code for Kasparov vs Karpov 1985 Game 16?

The ECO code for Kasparov vs Karpov 1985 Game 16 was B44. Replay Game 16 above and then use the 1985 match opening codes quick reference section to anchor that famous strategic battle to its ECO code.

What was the ECO code for Kasparov vs Karpov 1985 Game 24?

The ECO code for Kasparov vs Karpov 1985 Game 24 was B84. Replay the deciding Game 24 above and then compare it with the 1985 opening codes quick reference section to see how the match finished.

Related lookups and wider context

Did Kasparov ever lose a World Championship match?

Yes, Kasparov lost a World Championship match to Vladimir Kramnik in 2000. That later defeat makes the earlier Karpov rivalry even more revealing, so use this page’s match history to study Kasparov during his rise and title-defence years.

Which AI defeated Kasparov?

IBM’s Deep Blue defeated Garry Kasparov in their 1997 match. That computer milestone came later, so use the human rivalry games on this page to study the championship battles that built Kasparov’s reputation first.

📜 Chess History Guide
This page is part of the Chess History Guide — Explore how chess evolved from its ancient origins through world champions, cultural shifts, and the modern computer age.