International Chess Federation, FIDE, has released new guidelines targeting transgender players. The guidelines would strip trans men's titles, and potentially bar trans women from playing.

In recent months, the discussion surrounding transgender participation in sports has intensified. Several sports organizations have ruled that transgender women cannot participate in their competitions. This trend has expanded beyond traditional sports like swimming, touching even disc golf and billiards, based on perceived “advantages” of transgender athletes. The reaction to trans people in competition has grown to include non-sporting contests like beauty pageants and Jeopardy! after seeing transgender success. Now, FIDE, the world’s foremost international chess organization, has introduced guidelines that would revoke titles from transgender men and bar many transgender women from competing, asserting that trans women "have no right to participate.”

The regulations, reported online by French transgender FIDE master, Yosha Iglesias, spell out a list of policy changes that apply to transgender competition in chess. Among the policy changes:

Transgender men must relinquish their women-category titles after transitioning.

Transgender women can keep their previous titles.

Transgender women have “no right to compete” in the women’s division.

Transgender women will be “evaluated” by the FIDE Council on if they will be allowed to compete in a process that may take up to 2 years.

FIDE can mark transgender players as “transgender” in their files.

Gender changes must be “comply with the player’s national laws” and may include birth certificate documents (despite many nations refusing to change transgender birth certificates)

See the main page on transgender participation from the organization:

The unveiling of these regulations drew widespread ridicule, with numerous individuals challenging the notion that transgender women possess a “natural advantage” in chess. According to the chess news site Chessbase, the women’s category in chess exists to encourage increased participation among women, not because women inherently perform at a lower level in the game. Thus, the typical arguments against transgender women competing don't hold water, as it's implausible to claim that transgender women have an unfair advantage.

This isn't the first instance of scrutiny regarding transgender participation in non-physical competitions. In 2022, transgender Jeopardy champion Amy Schneider set the record as the highest-winning woman in Jeopardy history. Following her success, several anti-trans voices online claimed she unfairly took the title from “real women,” suggesting that transgender women possess an inherent advantage in trivia over cisgender women.

The regulations are harmful and discriminatory towards transgender individuals. The logic behind revoking titles from transgender men transitioning from the women’s category is not explained anywhere in the document. Additionally, these rules would delay transgender women from competing for up to two years while their gender is examined, and could even prohibit them indefinitely. Given that the usual "unfair advantage" argument doesn't logically apply in this context, these regulations appear to unfairly target transgender individuals while sidestepping even the usual arguments against trans competition.

The enforcement of these policies remains unclear. Iglesias took to Twitter, asking, "Am I woman enough?" She listed the FIDE council members, sharing photos that depict the majority as older cisgender men, adding, "these people will decide." The documents don't specify how decisions regarding a transgender member's participation will be made. Until further clarity, transgender international chess players face uncertainty about their continued involvement in the sport.

  • silent_water [she/her]
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    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Transgender men must relinquish their women-category titles after transitioning.

    Transgender women have “no right to compete” in the women’s division.

    they really buried the lede here. ALL trans people are banned from participation in the women's league.

    mfw chess is more transphobic than fucking starcraft. they've managed to outdo the gamers.

    edit: oh the other bit is even more infuriating. trans women aren't allowed to compete at all until the people who wrote these horrific rules approve their transition progress by verifying fucking birth certificates.

      • silent_water [she/her]
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        1 year ago

        no that's my point. not only is she allowed to compete, the same orgs list her as the best female starcraft player. there's the occasional bigot who can't shut up about her but they get shouted down by the other freeze-gamer

          • SerLava [he/him]
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            1 year ago

            Yeah she's had some support the whole time, increasing over the years since SC2 came out, but also plenty of online people have been absolutely horrible the whole time, because of course

        • uralsolo
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          edit-2
          1 year ago

          deleted by creator

      • UmbraVivi [he/him, she/her]
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        edit-2
        1 year ago

        Scarlett is a real anomaly. She's been around since forever, way before trans discourse became a mainstream thing. I think if she entered the scene today, there'd be a lot more talk about her but she's just kinda always been there so she's accepted.

    • iridaniotter [she/her, she/her]
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      1 year ago

      Transgender men must relinquish their women-category titles after transitioning.

      From my understanding, AFAICP (assigned female at initial chess playing) get retconned to match their current chess-assigned gender. Anyway, death to FIDE of course. khomeini