Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
On 30 May 2014, Stockfish 170514 (a development version of Stockfish 5 with tablebase support) convincingly won TCEC Season 6, scoring 35.5–28.5 against Komodo 7x in the Superfinal. [37] Stockfish 5 was released the following day. [38] In TCEC Season 7, Stockfish again made the Superfinal, but lost to Komodo with a score of 30.5–33.5. [37]
Starting with those of Wilhelm Steinitz, all 26,000 games played since then by chess world champions have been processed by a supercomputer using the Stockfish chess engine (rated above 3310 Elo). These predictions have proven not only to be extremely close to the actual results when players have played concrete games against one another, but ...
Starting from Season 11 however, Stockfish improved at a rate that left its rivals behind, crushing Komodo in Season 12 and 13. The advent of the neural network engine Leela Chess Zero meant Komodo has largely failed to qualify for the superfinal since, with a single exception in Season 22, when it lost to Stockfish.
Leela Chess Zero (abbreviated as LCZero, lc0) is a free, open-source chess engine and volunteer computing project based on Google's AlphaZero engine. It was spearheaded by Gary Linscott, a developer for the Stockfish chess engine, and adapted from the Leela Zero Go engine.
The superfinal was contested between Leela Chess Zero and Stockfish, with Leela Chess Zero winning by 5 points (+17 -12 = 71). [10] After a closely contested opening 33 games, Stockfish held a 1-point advantage, but Leela Chess Zero reeled off three wins in the following five games to take control of the superfinal.
Efficiently updatable neural networks were originally developed in computer shogi in 2018 by Yu Nasu, [61] [62] and had to be first ported to a derivative of Stockfish called Stockfish NNUE on 31 May 2020, [63] and integrated into the official Stockfish engine on 6 August 2020, [64] [65] before other chess programmers began to adopt neural ...
There was a glimmer of hope for Stockfish when it won games 43 and 45 to narrow the gap to 3 points, but Leela scored a decisive victory in games 61 and 62, outplaying Stockfish with both the white and black pieces in a Trompowsky Attack. The final third of the superfinal was more evenly contested, but Leela only conceded losses when Stockfish ...
Chess.com is an internet chess server and social networking website. [3] One of the largest chess platforms in the world, [4] the site has a freemium model in which some features are available for free, and others are available for accounts with subscriptions.