Tunde Onakoya grew up in Ikorodu, Lagos- a place where dreams often fade before they begin. But even as life closed in, Tunde dared to imagine something bigger: for himself, and for all the children society had left behind.
He taught himself chess in a barber’s shop. In 2018, he turned that childhood game into Chess in Slums Africa, a grassroots movement that began with a few boards and a lot of belief. What followed was nothing short of radical: from teaching kids in underserved communities how to play, to helping them focus, find purpose, and build futures.
In 2024, Tunde captured the world’s attention with a 58-hour chess marathon in Times Square, breaking the Guinness World Record and raising funds for the mission. But his journey didn’t start there — and it doesn’t end there either.
In this episode of Overnight Success, and the first ever recorded with a live audience, we talk about the long game: patience, precision, and vision. And how Tunde Onakoya became an overnight success — one move at a time.