Better things lay ahead on Wade's next European foray. He scored 5½/9 at
Baarn 1948 for a tied 2nd–3rd place, with
Harry Golombek winning. Wade made 3½/9 at
Hastings 1948–49 for 8th place, with
Nicolas Rossolimo winning. He represented New Zealand and Australia at the
FIDE Congress at Paris 1949, which marked the 25th anniversary of the founding of FIDE in Paris in 1924. Wade played many strong events in 1949, raising his standard significantly with competition against top-class
Grandmasters. At
Beverwijk 1949, he scored 4½/9 for a tied 6–7th place, with
Savielly Tartakower winning. Wade placed 2nd at
Arbon 1949 with 6/7, trailing only
Ludek Pachman. He struggled at
Trencianske Teplice 1949, placing last with 4½/19, as
Gideon Ståhlberg won. At
Heidelberg 1949, Wade scored 4/9 for a tied 6–8th place, as
Wolfgang Unzicker won. Then at
Oldenburg 1949, Wade made 8½/18 for 10th place, with
Efim Bogoljubow and
Elmārs Zemgalis on top. At
Southsea 1950, Wade scored 6/10 for a shared 7–13th place, as
Arthur Bisguier won. The constant practice led to his best result to date, an excellent shared 5–7th place in a powerful field at
Venice 1950 with 8½/15, with
Alexander Kotov the champion. This earned Wade the
International Master title later that year. Wade drew a 1950 match at
Bamberg by 5–5 with
Lothar Schmid, and settled in England. Wade was
British Champion in 1952 (at
Chester, with 8/11), and 1970 (at
Coventry, with 8/11). His other high finishes in the British Championship were 3rd at
Hastings 1953 on 7½/11 (with
Daniel Yanofsky winning), 2nd at
Rhyl 1969 on 7½/11 (with
Jonathan Penrose winning), and tied 3rd–6th at
Blackpool 1971 on 7/11 (with
Raymond Keene winning). Wade qualified for the
Saltsjöbaden Interzonal 1952, scored 6/20, and did not advance to the
Candidates level. Wade defeated many-time Scottish champion
William Fairhurst in a match at
Glasgow 1953 by 5½–2½. Wade went on to represent his adopted country in six
Chess Olympiads, and his country of birth on one occasion. In 92 games, his totals at this level are: (+30−26=36), for 52.2 per cent. His detailed results in Olympiads, from olimpbase.org, follow. •
Amsterdam 1954, England board 4, 6/12 (+4−4=4); •
Moscow 1956, England board 3, 6½/14 (+2−3=9); •
Munich 1958, England 1st reserve, 7/14 (+5−5=4); •
Leipzig 1960, England 2nd reserve, 6/11 (+4−3=4); •
Varna 1962, England 2nd reserve, 6/12 (+4−4=4); •
Siegen 1970, New Zealand board 2, 9/15 (+7−4=4); •
Skopje 1972, England board 3, 7½/14 (+4−3=7). Wade won several middle-strength Master events in the British Isles:
Ilford 1957 and 1968,
Paignton 1959,
Dublin 1962, and
Southend-on-Sea 1965. Wade was generally no more than a middle-ranking player in strong international tournaments. His other highlights against high-standard international-level competition include: • tied 4–5th at
Haifa/
Tel Aviv 1958 on 7½/13 (winner
Samuel Reshevsky); • 3rd at
Bognor Regis 1959 on 7/10 (winner
Erno Gereben); • 5th at
Reykjavík 1964 on 7½/13 (winner
Mikhail Tal); • tied 4–5th at
Málaga 1966 on 7/11; (winners
Alberic O'Kelly de Galway and
Eleazar Jiménez); • 6th at
Briseck 1971 on 7/13 (winner
Gideon Barcza); • 5th at
Cienfuegos 'B' 1975 on 10/17; (winners
Julio Boudy and
Amador Rodríguez Céspedes); • tied 7–12th in the World Senior Championship,
Bad Woerishofen 1992, on 7½/11 (winner
Efim Geller). Wade was the only British player to have faced
Bobby Fischer in tournament play (outside of Olympiads). They met three times, with Wade drawing one game and losing the other two. ==Later years==