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Subject: ChessGenius - Mini Review

Author: D Ridge

Date: 20:39:08 02/15/00


Greetings All!

I have just finished a fairly extensive test and comparison of ChessGenius for
the Palm Pilot and thought I would share my findings with you in the form of a
mini-review.

ChessGenius has just been released for the Palm Pilot and is definitely a
welcome and much needed addition to that arena. It has a pretty serious pedigree
as the author is none other than Richard Lang, who’s programs have won numerous
computer chess world championships.

It’s inevitable that initial comparisons be made to Pocket Chess, since it
appears to have been the only game in town for Palm Pilot users for quite
awhile, so let’s get that out of the way first.

I would estimate ChessGenius is approx. 300 to 400 points stronger than
PocketChess running on my Palm Pilot Professional. The difference in playing
strength is so great there really no point in discussing it further. So the main
comparison really lies with the features and user interface.

About the only area I would say the Pocket Chess is superior to ChessGenius is
the actual chess piece graphics but ChessGenius is certainly more than adequate
in this area.

Features I was surprised and delighted to see on ChessGenius are:

-Three different board sizes
-An analysis line showing score, ply depth, and current best line of play
-A partial move list on the screen beside the board
-Chess clocks
-Popular time controls

Things I was annoyed about:
-There appears to be no convenient way to shuttle back and forth through a game,
once played. You must either go to the command menu and select Take Back or
Forward for each move or use a Command Stroke for each move. The scroll buttons
should have been used for this.

-There’s no way to save a game and reload it at a later date, although it does
remember the game in progress.

To get a feel for it’s rating, I played a series of short matches against
popular dedicated computers of known strength I have in my stable. Richard
estimated the playing strength at around 2000 elo so I decided to start by
pitting it against the Saitek GK2100 which is generally felt to play between
2100 and 2200 USCF.

At game in 5 minutes, the GK2100 crushed ChessGenius 4-0. At game in 15 minutes
GK2100 again crushed ChessGenius at 4-0.

OK…let’s move down the rating scale a little. The next machine down the food
chain in my arsenal is a Karpov Grandmaster, generally felt to play 2000 USCF.

At game in 5 minutes the score was 3 ½ - ½ for the Grandmaster. Hmmm…not looking
good for ChessGenius. At game in 15 minutes however, things changed. ChessGenius
defeated Grandmaster 2 ½ - 1 ½.

Of course I have been around computer chess long enough to understand that this
relatively small number of games between two computers is not conclusive in any
way but I believe you can draw a few generalizations from the result.

There were a few common themes in all the games that ChessGenius lost. It lost
all it’s games in the endgame. It was very competent in the opening and middle
game tactically and often entered the endgame even or with a slight advantage.
It’s attention to pawn structure was very inadequate. ChessGenius’ position
often contained 2 sets of isolated-doubled pawns.

Another thing you could possible extrapolate from this is that is plays
comparatively better at faster time controls.

So, you can probably conclude from this that the rating is somewhere around 2000
USCF at time controls above 5 minutes per game and I freely admit that this is
nothing more than a guesstimate. I lack the time to play a 40/2 match which
would provide a far more accurate picture.

The thing I have to stress here, of course, is that this thing plays pretty damn
well for something the size of a deck of cards!!

A demo version with limited capability can be downloaded at ChessGenius.com and
$25.00 U.S. will get you the fully functioning version.

Check it out. It’s the best thing out there for the Palm Pilot!

David Ridge



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