Comments by SamTrenholme
OK, I've looked at the list and can sorta see why you had 12118 setups when I had 9820 setups. First of all, I consider mirror image setups to be identical, so I have removed them by requiring the queen to be left of the king (from white's side of the board) in all of my setups. This reduces the number of possible setups from 252,000 to 126,000. I note that you consider a setup and its mirror different--which it can be given certain castling rules.
I modified your list of crc setups to only show the ones where the queen is the the left of the king. For some reason, your list of 12118 setups has 6056 setups with the queen to the left of the king, and 6062 setups with the Queen to the right of the king. Once I did this, I noted that there are some 3764 possible opening setups, where all the pawns are guarded, the king is to the left of the queen, and where there are no bishops together, that are not on your list of possible setups. I have put this list here: http://www.samiam.org/chessvariants/crc-why-not.txt This list uses 'M' for the rook + knight piece and 'A' for the knight + bishop piece. - Sam Edit: Fixed 'queen' and 'king' wording. |
While I agree that Mats Winter was a little rude in his 'shup up' comment, I also feel that the comment was warranted. Someone came here and anonymously posted that all of Mats' variants deserve only one page. Mats was legitimately hurt. We know nothing about the anonymous person who said this comment; when people are allowed to post anonymously negative, hurtful things, people who are offering legitimate things, such as Mats, are put off and may end up leaving the site.
Anonymous trolls are very dangerous to internet discussion forums. They can very well chase off anyone who isn't a troll, destroying the forum. I saw trolls destroy Usenet, I saw trolls destroy Slashdot, I've seen them seriously damage Wikipedia, and I'm seeing them destroy Digg. I'm worried that they may start coming here and destroy the quality of this web site.
I think the policy of approving anonymous posts is an excellent one; I think it is what has saved chessvariants.org so far.
Again, this is a forum for Chess Variant inventors, not for anonymous trolls to flame Chess Variant inventors. I hope it stays that way.
- Sam
It should prove to be a very exciting match. Kramnik became the classical world Chess champion when he beat Kasparov in 2000; Topalov is currently FIDE's strongest player. I personally think Kramnik will win the match; he seems to have his arthritis under control and has more 1-on-1 match experience than Topalov. Most people are rooting for Topalov; he has a more exciting playing style complete with sacrifices.
Anyway, the first game starts tomorrow. Any thoughts on this match?
- Sam
This is supposibly most of the first game of the match. I can't get the game from the official site at http://www.worldchess2006.com/ but someone posted this over at http://chessgames.com [Event 'World Championship Match'] [Site 'Elista'] [Date '2006.09.23'] [Round '1'] [White 'GM Kramnik, Vladimir(RUS)'] [Black 'GM Topalov, Veselin(BUL)'] [Result '*'] [WhiteElo '2743'] [BlackElo '2813'] [Annotator 'Holger_Lieske'] [PlyCount '83'] [EventDate '2006.??.??'] 1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 d5 4. g3 dxc4 5. Bg2 Bb4+ 6. Bd2 a5 7. Qc2 Bxd2+ 8. Qxd2 c6 9. a4 b5 10. axb5 cxb5 11. Qg5 O-O 12. Qxb5 Ba6 13. Qa4 Qb6 14. O-O Qxb2 15. Nbd2 Bb5 16. Nxc4 Bxa4 17. Nxb2 Bb5 18. Ne5 Ra7 19. Bf3 Nbd7 20. Nec4 Rb8 21. Rfb1 g5 22. e3 g4 23. Bd1 Bc6 24. Rc1 Be4 25. Na4 Rb4 26. Nd6 Bf3 27. Bxf3 gxf3 28. Nc8 Ra8 29. Ne7+ Kg7 30. Nc6 Rb3 31. Nc5 Rb5 32. h3 Nxc5 33. Rxc5 Rb2 34. Rg5+ Kh6 35. Rgxa5 Rxa5 36. Nxa5 Ne4 37. Rf1 Nd2 38. Rc1 Ne4 39. Rf1 f6 40. Nc6 Nd2 41. Rd1 Ne4 42. Rf1 * The position appears to be drawn.
Thanks, Cherry. I was wondering why I couldn't see the game position. - Sam
OK, Kramnik has won the first game with the white pieces. The consensus seems to be that it was a drawn game until Topalov, trying to get a win, played the blunder 57. ... f5?
- Sam
I'm sure both Kramnik and Topalov would be beaten in Shogi by the world Shogi champion, but this doesn't make them poor FIDE chess players.
- Sam
It's still a work in progress, but is an excellent program.
Dan played well. I personally think 5. ... Ah6 is a good try for black to both hold on to the pawn and to defend against the gambit.
As another note, if you give ChessV enough time to think about the move, it sees that white can force a mate after 15. Bf2.
- Sam
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What I did was make the pawn worth on 333 points, the rook only worth 1666 points, the queen worth 3000 points, and so on. What this does is make factors not directly having to do with material, such as the position of the pieces, three times more valuable. Once I did this, this is how ChessV handled Dan's gambit play:
1. Ah3 e5 2. f4 exf4 3. Nd3. Stock ChessV tries too hard to hold on to the pawn here: 3. ... g5?. However, by tweaking ChessV to only be one-third as greedy, ChessV responds with the much more sensible 3. ... f5 or 3. ... Ng6, depending on how much time we give ChessV to think about the position.
My experiments show that tweaking like this, when done for the course of the entire game, will make ChessV make some unsound sacrifices in the late mid-game and end-game, resulting in the 'stock' ChessV winning the game. However, if I have the tweaked version of ChessV play white only for the first ten moves, than give the stock pieces to the normal ChessV, the result is the same as giving both sides the stock pieces: White wins the game.
For Greg's info, this testing was done at an I-depth of 7 and with pruning and razoring disabled.
If Dan is interested, I'm willing to see how well he does against the tweaked ChessV (for the first ten moves, anyway).
- Sam
What I have published of John's (with his permission, of course) is his notes on one of his 2001 Grand Chess world championship games.
- Sam
Zillions Save Game File Version 0.02 HH RulesFile=C:\Zillions\3rd_party\largechess\Chess,_Large.zrf VariantName=Janus Chess 1. Janus i1 - h3 1. Pawn e7 - e5 2. Pawn f2 - f4 2. Pawn e5 x f4 3. Knight c1 - d3 3. Pawn g7 - g5 4. Pawn e2 - e3 4. Pawn f4 x e3 5. Bishop g1 x e3 5. Pawn h7 - h6 6. Knight h1 - g3 6. Knight c8 - d6 7. Janus b1 - c3 7. Bishop g8 - h7 8. Bishop d1 - h5 8. Pawn i7 - i6 9. Janus h3 - g4 9. Queen f8 - g8 10. Queen f1 - e2 10. King e8 - f8 @ f8 0 0 11. Knight d3 - c5 11. Bishop h7 - f5 12. Knight g3 x f5 12. Pawn i6 x h5 13. Janus c3 - e5 13. Pawn h5 x g4 14. Knight c5 x d7 14. King f8 - e8 @ e8 0 0 15. Bishop e3 - f2 15. Bishop d8 - e7 16. Janus e5 x d6 16. King e8 x d7 @ d7 0 0 17. Queen e2 x e7 17. King d7 - c6 @ c6 0 0 18. Knight f5 - d4 18. King c6 - d5 @ d5 0 0 19. Queen e7 - e5
- Sam
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On another related subject, I have another idea for a Capa variant bouncing through my head: The 'Marshall' moves as rook + king (promoted Shogi rook); The 'Archbishop' moves as bishop + king (promoted shogi bishop); and the 'Queen' moves as king + knight ('Crowned Knight' in royal court chess). This weakening of the pieces should make the game more strategic and less tactical.
- Sam