Bodnaruk won the under 12 girls' section of the
European Youth Chess Championship in 2003. In 2004, she finished the runner-up in the under 12 girls' division of both European and
World Youth Chess Championships. She took the bronze medal in the
World U14 Girls Championship of 2005. In 2008, she won the Russian Junior (Under-20) Girls Championship and helped the Russian team to win the silver medal in the World Youth U16 Chess Olympiad. In August 2010, Bodnaruk was part of the Russian women's team in the 7th China-Russia Match. The following month, she played in the Russia B team at the
Women's Chess Olympiad in Khanty-Mansiysk and won an individual silver medal playing board four. In 2012, she won for the second time the Russian Junior Girls Championship and tied for the first place, finishing third on tiebreak, in the
World Junior Girls Chess Championship. Bodnaruk competed in the
Women's World Chess Championship 2012, where she was knocked out in the first round by
Lela Javakhishvili. By winning the women's Russian Championship Higher League of 2013 she qualified for the
Russian Women's Championship Superfinal, held later that year, where she finished eighth. In December 2013, she won the Women's Russian Cup, a knockout tournament, by defeating
WIM Margarita Schepetkova in the final. In 2015, Bodnaruk won the
Saint Petersburg women's
rapid championship and the Russian women's
blitz championship. Later that year, she finished second in the Russian Women's Championship Superfinal and played in the gold medal-winning Russian team at the 2015 Women's
European Team Chess Championship in
Reykjavík. Bodnaruk won the women's section of the 2016 Moscow Open, edging
Soumya Swaminathan and
Alexandra Obolentseva on tiebreak. In December 2023, she won the women's
World Rapid Chess Championship 2023 with a score of 11/15 (+8-1=6). ==References==