The tournament was an eight-player, double round-robin tournament, meaning there were 14 rounds with each player facing the others twice: once with the black pieces and once with the white pieces. The tournament winner qualified to play
Magnus Carlsen for the
World Championship in 2023. However, Carlsen said following the
previous championship in 2021 that, due to a lack of motivation, he might not defend his title unless the challenger was
Alireza Firouzja, who rose to number two in the world rankings in 2021 at the age of 18. After the tournament, FIDE gave a deadline of 20 July, 2022 for Carlsen to make a decision before retracting it later calling it a "misunderstanding". However, on 20 July, Magnus Carlsen stated that he was unwilling to play, meaning that the top two finishers of the candidates played for the world championship in 2023. The players affected in the 2022 Candidates were Fabiano Caruana and Hikaru Nakamura from the US; they faced each other in rounds 1 and 8.
Regulations The time control was 120 minutes for the first 40 moves, 60 minutes for the next 20 moves, and then 15 minutes for the rest of the game, plus a 30-second increment per move starting from move 61. Players got 1 point for a win, ½ point for a draw and 0 points for a loss. While there was no tie for first place, such a situation would have been addressed as follows: • Players would play two
rapid chess games at 15 minutes plus 10 seconds per move. If a three- to six-way tie had occurred, a single round-robin would be played. If seven or eight players had been tied, a single round-robin would be played with a time limit of 10 minutes plus 5 seconds per move. • If any players had still been tied for first after the rapid chess games, they would play two
blitz chess games at 3 minutes plus 2 seconds per move. In the case of more than two players being tied, a single round-robin would be played. • If any players were still tied for first after these blitz chess games, the remaining players would play a knock-out blitz tournament at the same time control. In each mini-match of the proposed knock-out tournament, the first player to win a game would win the mini-match. This was a change from previous candidates tournaments from 2013 to 2021, which used tie-breaks based on players' results in the tournament (such as results of head-to-head games between tied players, and number of wins). Ties for places other than first were broken by, in order: (1)
Sonneborn–Berger score; (2) total number of wins; (3) head-to-head score among tied players; (4) drawing of lots. The prize money was
€48,000 for first place, €36,000 for second place, and €24,000 for third place (with players on the same number of points sharing prize money, irrespective of tie-breaks), plus €3,500 per half-point for every player, for a total prize pool of €500,000. During the 2022 Chess Candidates tournament, the players were uncertain if
Magnus Carlsen would defend or forfeit his World Chess Champion title. As such, it was not clear if the tournament's runner-up would become the challenger for the
2023 World Chess Championship title match until the event was over. ==Results==