Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
KingsRow is a strong checkers and draughts engine. It was released by Ed Gilbert in 2000. The checkers engine can be used with the CheckerBoard GUI. It is only available as a DLL on Windows since CheckerBoard is a windows-only program. [1] The engine is available as freeware. The engine uses neural networks, opening books, and endgame databases ...
Chinook is a computer program that plays checkers (also known as draughts). It was developed between the years 1989 to 2007 at the University of Alberta, by a team led by Jonathan Schaeffer and consisting of Rob Lake, Paul Lu, Martin Bryant, and Norman Treloar.
Programmers added specific heuristics for the endgame – for example, the king should move to the center of the board. [10] However, a more comprehensive solution was needed. In 1965, Richard Bellman proposed the creation of a database to solve chess and checkers endgames using retrograde analysis.
Checkers [note 1] (American English), also known as draughts (/ d r ɑː f t s, d r æ f t s /; British English), is a group of strategy board games for two players which involve forward movements of uniform game pieces and mandatory captures by jumping over opponent pieces.
Endgame tablebase, a database saying how to play endgames; Expectiminimax tree, an adaptation of a minimax game tree to games with an element of chance; Extensive-form game, a game tree enriched with payoffs and information available to players; Game classification, an article discussing ways of classifying games
Nemesis is an English draughts program by Murray Cash. Today Nemesis is no longer commercially available; development stopped years ago. Nemesis was the strongest program in 2002, when it won the British computer championship against Wyllie, a 16-game match ending +5 =11 in favor of Nemesis and the Computer Checkers World Championship played out in Las Vegas.
The game comes with a downloadable endgame database generator that uses a proprietary database format, called FEG (Final Endgame Generator). The series on the PC features for the first time true 3D boards that can be rotated and zoomed in and out.
The SSDF's current testing platform includes an AMD Ryzen 7 1800X 8-Core 3.6 GHz with 16 GB of RAM-memory and a 64-bit operating system. On this platform they have chosen to add the 6 piece Syzygy endgame database, installed on SSD, for the programs that are able to use it.