The 34th World Memory Championships, organised by the World Memory Sports Federation, took place in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, from 12–14 December 2025. The three-day event brought together 169 competitors from 15 countries, including Mongolia, Australia, Germany, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Korea, India, Russia and Vietnam, who contested 10 memory events testing visual and auditory recall.
Mongolia was represented by 37 athletes plus coaches and international officials, led by coach B.Baasandorj and coach O.Sengesamdan. The Mongolian team dominated the competition, claiming 27 gold, 21 silver and 22 bronze medals. Mongolia also took home 10 cups, finishing top of the team standings with 20,206 points, ahead of Australia (12,570) and China (10,186).
This marks the seventh team title for Mongolia at the World Memory Championships. In addition, International Grand Master O.Naranzul won the overall 2025 World Champion title after topping the combined standings across all 10 events.
The 34th World Memory Championships, organised by the World Memory Sports Federation, took place in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, from 12–14 December 2025. The three-day event brought together 169 competitors from 15 countries, including Mongolia, Australia, Germany, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Korea, India, Russia and Vietnam, who contested 10 memory events testing visual and auditory recall.
Mongolia was represented by 37 athletes plus coaches and international officials, led by coach B.Baasandorj and coach O.Sengesamdan. The Mongolian team dominated the competition, claiming 27 gold, 21 silver and 22 bronze medals. Mongolia also took home 10 cups, finishing top of the team standings with 20,206 points, ahead of Australia (12,570) and China (10,186).
This marks the seventh team title for Mongolia at the World Memory Championships. In addition, International Grand Master O.Naranzul won the overall 2025 World Champion title after topping the combined standings across all 10 events.
