In 2001, he took second place in the Russian Youth Chess Championship in U8 age group behind winner Daria Voit.
In the following years, Vadim Moiseenko occasionally participated in chess tournament, but in 2012 Prague represented Russia in European Youth Chess Championship in the U18 age group, where he became a winner.
In 2012, he started studying in Saint Petersburg and less time left for chess.
[4] In 2017, in Kazan Vadim Moiseenko won the Rashid Nezhmetdinov memorial.
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