Vltava Cube June 2026 draws small but official Prague field
Just 23 cubers turned up in Holešovice, but Vltava Cube still delivered official WCA solves and another steady stop in Prague’s year-round circuit.

Vltava Cube’s June stop showed how a small local meet can still matter. On June 6 at FYFT in Praha 7 - Holešovice, 23 competitors took official solves as the sixth event in the Vltava Cube 2026 series, keeping Prague’s calendar moving between bigger championships and one-off appearances.
The meet was tightly run from the start. Registration opened on May 9 and closed on May 30, the field was capped at 40, and there were no on-the-spot signups. The event used a waiting-list process, a 300 Kč base fee, and a strict spectator rule that allowed companions only, with each competitor limited to one guest. Adam Kořínek, Matyáš Krejcárek, Tomáš Čech, and Veronika Becková were listed as organizers, while Matyáš Krejcárek and Tomáš Nguyen served as delegates. That kind of structure is exactly what gives a club series its value: low-friction access to WCA conditions without the noise and sprawl of a marquee national meet.

The podiums backed up the sense that this was a serious multi-event contest, not just a 3x3 side show. Václav Maxa won Square-1 with a 9.21-second average, ahead of Garold Hrabavets at 10.26 and Filip Hosnedl at 12.42. Matěj Grohmann took 7x7x7 Cube in 2:15.60, Matouš Keder won Pyraminx with a 2.02 average, and Vojtěch Grohmann claimed Skewb in 1.99. Those results made the June stop feel like a real test across different parts of the skill set, from big cubes to the fast, technical events where one clean average can separate the podium.

That continuity is the point of Vltava Cube. Earlier 2026 stops drew 30 competitors in January, 36 in February, 26 in March, 40-capacity in April, and 26 in May, so June’s 23-person field was smaller but still part of a stable rhythm. FYFT also frames its speedcube events as open to both beginners and advanced cubers, and its 2025/26 speedcube cup runs from September to June with points tracked across the season. With July 12 and August 1 already on the calendar, Vltava Cube kept doing what a good local series should do: give Prague cubers a place to show up, get official solves, and come back the next month ready to measure the gap.
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