Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
While his parents are on holiday, Fritz White—controlled by the player—is challenged to a game of chess by King Black. Working with his cousin Bianca, and his parents' friend King Kaleidoscope, they travel across the countryside while engaging in a series of minigames, which demonstrate chess piece movements, such as a Ms. Pac-Man-style game demonstrating the rook's horizontal and vertical ...
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Learn_to_Play_Chess_with_Fritz_and_Chesster&oldid=307648491"
Fritz is a German chess program originally developed for Chessbase by Frans Morsch based on his Quest program, ported to DOS, and then Windows by Mathias Feist. With version 13, Morsch retired, and his engine was first replaced by Gyula Horvath's Pandix, and then with Fritz 15, Vasik Rajlich's Rybka.
Fritz Chess is a video game for the Wii, Nintendo DS, and PlayStation 3 developed by Freedom Factory Studios and published by Deep Silver in 2009. A mobile port bearing the same name was developed by PlayWay and published by Gammick Entertainment and released the same year.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate
In 1953, in Copenhagen he played in 2nd World Junior Chess Championship and ranked in 11th place (3rd in Final B). [1] In 1955, Frits Roessel won 1st Dutch Open Chess Championship. [2] Frits Roessel played for Netherlands in the Chess Olympiad: [3] In 1958, at second reserve board in the 13th Chess Olympiad in Munich (+6, =3, -2).
The game uses a port of Shredder chess engine. [1] Pocket Fritz 2 was released in 2002. [2] In 2006, Pocket Fritz 1 and 2 lost the online ability to search positions on Chessbase servers. [3] Pocket Fritz 3 was released in 2008 and used Hiarcs 12 as the engine. [4] The successor Pocket Fritz 4 was released in 2009 and uses Hiarcs 13 as engine. [5]
Friedrich Sämisch (20 September 1896 – 16 August 1975) was a German chess player and chess theorist. He was among the inaugural recipients of the title International Grandmaster from FIDE in 1950.