Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Chess 7.0 is a 1982 video game published by Odesta for Apple II, Atari 8-bit, Commodore 64, and MS-DOS. Gameplay. Chess 7.0 allowed for 2 player play against another ...
ChessBase is a German company that develops and sells chess software, maintains a chess news site, and operates an internet chess server for online chess. Founded in 1986, it maintains and sells large-scale databases containing the moves of recorded chess games. [1] [2] The databases contain data from prior games and provide engine analyses of ...
Included was information about a leaked contract between Kasparov and former FIDE Secretary General Ignatius Leong from Singapore, in which the Kasparov campaign reportedly "offered to pay Leong US$500,000 and to pay $250,000 a year for four years to the ASEAN Chess Academy, an organisation Leong helped create to teach the game, specifying that ...
The King's Indian Defence (or KID) is a common chess opening. It is defined by the following moves: 1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 g6.
Tejas Bakre (born 12 May 1981, Ahmadabad, India) is an Indian Chess Champion. [1] He acquire Fide Master (FM) title in 1997 and International Master (IM) [2] title in 1999. [3] He was first GM of Gujarat, India. He is Professional Chess Coach and FIDE Senior Trainer (2022).
Advanced chess then evolved into freestyle chess with rules very different from those of León, and a new category of chess players was created: the "freestyle chess player", called the centaur (a mythological term chosen to imply joint work by human and computer). In this new type of chess, the integration between man and machine has become ...
In chess, the Smith–Morra Gambit (or simply Morra Gambit) is an opening gambit against the Sicilian Defence distinguished by the moves: . 1. e4 c5 2. d4 cxd4 3. c3. White sacrifices a pawn to develop quickly and create attacking chances.
In 1915, Marshall opened the Marshall Chess Club in New York City. In 1925 Marshall appeared in the short Soviet film Chess Fever in a cameo appearance along with Capablanca. In 1920, he won the American Chess Congress. In 1922, Marshall played 155 games simultaneously at the National Club in Montreal, Canada, a world record.