2025 Summer World University Games

The 2025 FISU Summer World University Games, also known as Rhine-Ruhr 2025, was a multi-sport event held from 16 to 27 July 2025, in five cities in Rhine-Ruhr metropolitan region and in Berlin as an outlying venue in Germany. The Rhine-Ruhr region had previously hosted the 1989 Summer Universiade in Duisburg.

2025 FISU Summer World University Games
Host cityRhine-Ruhr metropolitan region
CountryGermany
MottoA Summer With Distinction (German: Sommer Cum Laude)
Nations113
Athletes6,233
Events234 in 18 sports
Opening16 July 2025
Closing27 July 2025
Opened byBärbel Bas
Federal Minister of Labour and Social Affairs of Germany
Torch lighterAlexander Wieczerzak
Max Hartung
Mathias Mester
Nico Schlotterbeck
Sarah Wellbrock
Sonja Greinacher
Main venueMSV-Arena (opening ceremony)
Landschaftspark Duisburg-Nord (closing ceremony)
Websiterhineruhr2025.com/en
Chungcheong 2027 →

The event returned to its traditional 2-year cycle following the 2021 Summer World University Games in Chengdu, first postponed until 2022 and then postponed again to 2023 due to the COVID-19 pandemic (replacing Yekaterinburg 2023 due to Russian invasion of Ukraine).

Host selection

The German University Sports Federation (ADH) announced in August 2018 that it intended to submit a bid to FISU for a future edition of the Summer Universiade. However, the choice of which edition and which city/region was interested was delayed until August of that same year because of school holidays. However, the choice of which edition and which city/region was interested was delayed until August of that same year because of school holidays and also for bureaucratic reasons and as the venues for the 2021 and 2023 editions had already been chosen, it would be up to the entity to choose the next host city process opened which was 2025. Also noteworthy is the ADH proposal, which received approval from the German parliament in record time, being made in December of same year.

Thus, the first form of contact was made soon afterwards. In mid-April 2019, an ADH delegation visited FISU headquarters in Lausanne, Switzerland, which was pleased with the German intention to host the Summer Universiade, and it was agreed to immediately maintain a close and continuous talks issues related to the executive project and the rules for the bid. With the delivery of the “Letter of Intent” to FISU in the second half of June, the bidding process began, which was approved by 95.4% of voting members present at the ADH general assembly in November and It was another milestone towards the official bid project. Reception to the project grew exponentially and positively to the point that the Federal Ministry of the Interior (Germany), Minister-President of North Rhine-Westphalia, German Olympic Sports Confederation also almost immediately approved the proposal and started talking to the cities of Bochum, Duisburg, Düsseldorf, Essen, and Mülheim an der Ruhr so that a joint bid for the Rhine-Ruhr metropolitan region could be made, given their ease and proximity.

The idea also excited the member schools of the ADH, as well as other partners in organized sport and the scientific concept. In September 2020, the feasibility study for a joint project involving 5 cities in the Rhine-Ruhr Region was released. In September 2020, the feasibility study for a joint project involving 5 cities in the Rhine-Ruhr Region was released and approved in a virtual plenary session of the Landtag Nordrhein-Westfalen and which unanimously approved the proposal on 20 October 2020. In mid-March 2021, the ADH was able to report that the bid book had been submitted to FISU within the deadline. Following the final inspection visit by a FISU delegation from 7–5 May 2021, the final decision of the FISU Executive Committee was pending at its meeting on 15 May 2021 in Düsseldorf with a decision in favor of the regional proposal.

It was also expected that Budapest, the Hungarian capital that had applied to host the 2019 Summer Universiade, would make a proposal to FISU, but the city withdrew due to a lack of accommodation and other conditions. However, it was already known that FISU was in favor of the German bid.

Reactions to the German application

FISU was particularly impressed by the confident approach that the determination of a host location or region should be based on the results of a feasibility study or potential analysis, which was considered a very sensible approach, especially against the background of Hamburg's failed bid for the 2024 Summer Olympics. This will be the fourth time that the World University Games will be held in a region, instead of being centralized in a host city.

2025 Summer World University Games bidding results
City / region Nation Votes
Rhine-Ruhr metropolitan region Germany Unanimous

Development and preparations

Venues

The organising committee used existing and temporary sports facilities, with some existing venues being renovated for these games. Unlike previous editions, this edition was completely decentralized. Instead of an athlete's village, athletes stayed in hotels and university residential buildings around the host cities and regions. The competition venues are spread over five cities in the North Rhine-Westphalia state (Bochum, Duisburg, Essen, Hagen and Mülheim) and the German capital Berlin.

Originally, Düsseldorf was scheduled to host some sporting events and the opening ceremonies, but due to changes related to logistics and the event size, the city withdrew, and the event had to be replanned due to cost countermeasures.

After this change, in September 2024, it was announced that Hagen and Berlin were added as host cities. Even though Berlin is more than 500km from the host region, it was considered the most plausible financial option for the organization to transfer three sports to Berlin (swimming, diving and volleyball), as well as expanding the competition area to Hagen to host some preliminary basketball games.

North Rhine-Westphalia

Venue City Sports Capacity
Lohrheidestadion Bochum Athletics 16,223
Jahrhunderthalle Basketball (3x3, wheelchair 3x3) TBA
MSV-Arena Duisburg Opening ceremony 31,514
Landschaftspark Duisburg-Nord Closing ceremony 15,000
Wedau Rowing TBA
ASC Duisburg Aquatics (water polo) 5,000
Walter-Schädlich-Halle Basketball (preliminaries) 800
Sportpark Duisburg [de] Beach volleyball 1,650
Messe Essen Essen Fencing (Hall 5)
Gymnastics (artistic (Hall 3), rhythmic (Hall 4))
Judo (Hall 4)
Taekwondo (Hall 6)
Table tennis (Hall 1)
TBA (hall 1)
TBA (Hall 3)
TBA (Hall 4)
TBA (Hall 5)
TBA (Hall 6)
Grugahalle Basketball (finals) 7,700
Essen Tennis Club Tennis 5,000
Sporthalle Am Hallo Basketball (preliminaries) 2,500
Sportpark Am Hallo Stadion Archery (preliminaries) 3,800
Zollverein Coal Mine Industrial Complex Archery (finals) TBA
Ischelandhalle [de] Hagen Basketball (preliminaries) 3,145
Westenergie Sporthalle Mülheim Badminton 4,000

Berlin

Venue City Sports Capacity
Europe SportPark Aquatics Centre Berlin Aquatics (swimming, diving) 4,200
Max-Schmeling-Halle Volleyball (finals) 9,200
Sportforum Hohenschönhausen Volleyball (preliminaries) 4,750
Großsporthalle Hämmerlingstraße [de] Volleyball (preliminaries) 1,000
Horst-Korber-Sportzentrum Volleyball (preliminaries) 3,500

The Games

Sports

In addition to the 15 compulsory sports, up to three optional sports could be chosen, while respecting the infrastructure and local demands. The organizing committee proposed beach volleyball, rowing and 3x3 basketball, along with some Paralympic disciplines (which marked the first Summer World University Games to feature para-athletes and para-sport events, following the introduction of para-sports at the 2025 Winter World University Games), as its optional sports.

This was the first time that 3x3 basketball was part of the World University Summer Games program, while beach volleyball returned since it was last held in 2013, while rowing remained after returning for the 2021 Summer World University Games.

  • Aquatics
    •  Diving (15) (details)
    •  Swimming (42) (details)
    •  Water polo (2) (details)
  •  Archery (10) (details)
  •  Athletics (51) (details)
  •  Badminton (6) (details)
  • Basketball
    •  Basketball (2) (details)
    •  3x3 basketball (2) (details)
    • Wheelchair 3x3 basketball (2) (details)
  •  Fencing (12) (details)
  •  Gymnastics (details)
    •  Artistic gymnastics (14)
    •  Rhythmic gymnastics (8)
  •  Judo (15) (details)
  •  Rowing (11) (details)
  •  Table tennis (7) (details)
  •  Taekwondo (24) (details)
  •  Tennis (7) (details)
  • Volleyball
    •  Beach volleyball (2) (details)
    •  Volleyball (2) (details)

Schedule

All times and dates use Central European Summer Time (UTC+2)
OC Opening ceremony Event competitions 1 Event finals CC Closing ceremony
July 16
Wed
17
Thu
18
Fri
19
Sat
20
Sun
21
Mon
22
Tue
23
Wed
24
Thu
25
Fri
26
Sat
27
Sun
Events
Ceremonies OC CC
Aquatics
Diving 2 2 2 2 1 1 5 15
Swimming 3 5 7 5 6 7 9 42
Water polo 2 2
Archery 6 4 10
Athletics 1 5 5 12 3 11 14 51
Badminton 1 5 6
Basketball Basketball 1 1 2
3×3 basketball 2 2
Wheelchair 3x3 basketball 2 2
Fencing 2 2 2 2 2 2 12
Gymnastics
Artistic 1 1 2 10 14
Rhythmic 2 6 8
Judo 5 4 5 1 15
Rowing 11 11
Table tennis 2 1 2 2 7
Taekwondo 3 2 4 4 4 4 3 24
Tennis 5 2 7
Volleyball Beach 2 2
Indoor 1 1 2
Daily medal events 0 10 13 21 20 14 20 31 20 22 38 25 234
Cumulative total 0 10 23 44 64 78 98 129 149 171 209 234

Cultural events

As part of the event, festivals were held around three main venues in Bochum (17–20 July), Duisburg, and Essen (both 21–26 July), offering various entertainment during the day and concerts and public viewings in the evening. The festivals took place as the Ruhr Games Festival at the Jahrhunderthalle Bochum, the Summer Park Festival in Grugapark, and the Summer Beach Festival on the Dreieckswiese in Sportpark Duisburg. The concert program includes, among others, Ski Aggu, Querbeat, and Deichkind performed at the closing ceremony.

  • Schedule:
  1. 2025 FISU World Conference - 17-19 July
  2. Beach Festival (Duisburg) - 21-27 July
  3. Non-Competition Sports - 25-26 July
  4. Park Festival (Essen) 21-26 July
  5. Ruhr Games Festival (Bochum) - 17-20 July

Participating NUSFs

The following 113 National University Sporting Federations sent delegations to the 2025 Summer World University Games.

Participating National University Sports Federations
  1.  Albania
  2.  Argentina
  3.  Armenia
  4.  Australia
  5.  Austria
  6.  Azerbaijan
  7.  Bangladesh
  8.  Belgium (67)
  9.  Bhutan
  10.  Bosnia and Herzegovina
  11.  Botswana
  12.  Brazil
  13.  Bulgaria
  14.  Burkina Faso
  15.  Burundi
  16.  Cambodia
  17.  Canada
  18.  Chile
  19.  China
  20.  Cameroon
  21.  Democratic Republic of the Congo
  22.  Colombia
  23.  Costa Rica
  24.  Croatia
  25.  Cyprus
  26.  Czech Republic
  27.  Denmark
  28.  Ecuador
  29.  Egypt
  30.  Estonia (53)
  31.  Ethiopia
  32.  Finland
  33.  France
  34.  The Gambia
  35.  Georgia
  36.  Germany (host)
  37.  Ghana
  38.  Great Britain
  39.  Guatemala
  40.  Guyana
  41.  Haiti
  42.  Honduras
  43.  Hong Kong
  44.  Hungary
  45.  India
  46.  Individual Neutral Athletes (47)
  47.  Israel
  48.  Ireland
  49.  Italy
  50.  Jamaica
  51.  Japan
  52.  Kazakhstan
  53.  Kenya
  54.  Kyrgyzstan
  55.  South Korea
  56.  Kosovo
  57.  Laos
  58.  Latvia
  59.  Lebanon
  60.  Libya
  61.  Lithuania
  62.  Luxembourg
  63.  Macau
  64.  Malaysia (64)
  65.  Mali
  66.  Malta
  67.  Moldova
  68.  Mexico
  69.  Mongolia
  70.  Netherlands
  71.  Nepal
  72.  Nigeria
  73.  Norway
  74.  New Zealand
  75.  Oman
  76.  Pakistan
  77.  Paraguay
  78.  Philippines (34)
  79.  Poland (228)
  80.  Portugal
  81.  Qatar
  82.  Romania
  83.  San Marino
  84.  São Tomé and Príncipe
  85.  Saudi Arabia
  86.  Senegal
  87.  Sierra Leone
  88.  Singapore
  89.  Slovakia
  90.  Slovenia
  91.  Somalia
  92.  South Africa
  93.  Spain
  94.  Sri Lanka
  95.  Sweden
  96.  Switzerland
  97.  Chinese Taipei (196)
  98.  Tajikistan
  99.  Tanzania
  100.  Thailand
  101.  Trinidad and Tobago
  102.  Tunisia
  103.  Turkey (144)
  104.  Uganda
  105.  Ukraine (106)
  106.  United Arab Emirates
  107.  United States
  108.  Uzbekistan
  109.  Venezuela
  110.  Vietnam
  111.  Virgin Islands
  112.  Zambia
  113.  Zimbabwe

Medal table

  *   Host nation (Germany)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Japan34212479
2 China30271774
3 United States28272984
4 South Korea2192757
5 Italy14101943
6 Germany*11121740
 Individual Neutral Athletes88521
7 South Africa65819
8 Turkey65718
9 Chinese Taipei513725
10 Poland511824
11 Australia53412
12 Great Britain48618
13 Uzbekistan44715
14 Ukraine43512
15 Spain37616
16 France35917
17 Switzerland34310
18 Czech Republic32611
19 Lithuania3047
20 India25512
21 Thailand24410
22 Netherlands2428
23 Brazil23712
24 Azerbaijan2204
25 Canada21811
26 Hong Kong2147
27 Finland2136
28 Portugal2125
29 Moldova2002
30 Georgia1315
31 Kenya1225
32 Belgium1124
33 Norway1113
 Slovakia1113
 Sweden1113
36 Ireland1102
37 Kazakhstan101011
38 Kyrgyzstan1012
39 Armenia1001
 Denmark1001
 Israel1001
 Luxembourg1001
 Slovenia1001
44 Hungary010818
45 Croatia0224
46 Tunisia0123
47 Malaysia0112
48 Egypt0101
 Kosovo0101
 Latvia0101
 Virgin Islands0101
52 Romania0044
53 Cyprus0022
 New Zealand0022
55 Austria0011
 Colombia0011
 Mexico0011
 Mongolia0011
Totals (58 entries)234234297765
Source:

Concerns and controversies

Administrative errors by Indian officials

On 21 July 2025, 6 of the 12 Indian mixed badminton team players sent were barred from the event. This situation was a result of an error made during the Sports Technical Congress. Following this, the Association Indian Universities (AIU) announced that there had been a series of serious failures and suspended its vice president Baljiet Singh Sekhon, and as consequence, opened an investigation that resulted in the discovery of several flaws ranging from the athlete selection process to the national call-up for the Games.

In addition, the Indian delegation of the same sport also had problems with their uniforms that did not meet the standards required by FISU in which only the players' surnames should be written on their backs and not their full names. Another error on the same kits was in relation to the fact that there was no national symbol of India on their uniforms, which resulted in a fine of €1000 per game. The problem was only corrected a few minutes before the semi-final.

Withdrawal of Iranian athletes

Originally, the presence of an Iranian delegation was expected. However, due to issues with the athletes' visas, on 14 July 2025, the National Federation of University Sports of Iran officially announced its withdrawal from the event. Since there was not enough time to call up a new team for the men's volleyball tournament, the tournament proceeded with 15 participating teams.

Chinese Taipei/Taiwan name medal controversy

On 23 July, a scuffle broke out after the Chinese Taipei (Taiwan) team won the silver medal in the men's team Kyorugi. Following the medal ceremony, a letter of congratulation from the Minister of Education was presented to the athletes by a Chinese Taipei team sports official, which drew the attention of two representatives from the China Student Sports Federation who tried to snatch the message. Other Taiwanese sports officials intervene by formed a barrier around the group, leading to physical shoving and verbal confrontation between the two sides. Taiwan's President Lai Ching-te, Premier Cho Jung-tai, and major political parties, including the Kuomintang and Taiwan People's Party, all publicly condemned the actions of the Chinese delegation. The director-general of the Sports Administration, Cheng Shih-chung emphasized that the message presentation was a legitimate expression in a democratic society and was not restricted by Olympic naming conventions.

China's official media Xinhua News Agency issued a statement from the China Students Sports Federation in the early morning of July 25, pointing out that "Taiwan violated the Lausanne Agreement and the regulations of FISU", "Chinese official did not seize, but only verified Taiwan document", "Taiwan personnel took the lead in pushing, resulting in injuries to Chinese official", "FISU fully supported China's position and summoned the head of the Chinese Taipei delegation to stop the violation", accusing DPP of political manipulation for the Great Recall vote on July 26. Similar behavior occurred later, but a non-Chinese official went to verify the letter. At the closing ceremony FISU president Leonz Eder said "We call for global solidarity and peace, Oppose those who only care about personal interests, Acting without regard for the well-being of all mankind", might be alluding this incident.

See also

  • 2025 Winter World University Games, held in Turin, Italy
  • 1989 Summer Universiade, hosted by the same region
  • 1993 Summer Universiade, a similar host concept
  • 1997 Summer Universiade, a similar host concept
  • 1999 Summer Universiade, a similar host concept
  • 2027 Summer World University Games, a similar host concept
  • 2029 Summer World University Games, a similar host concept

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