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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 ...
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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.
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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.
Chess Titans: n/a No No Yes No No ChessV: Combat Chess: n/a Yes Yes Yes Fritz: Rybka, earlier Pandix or Fritz: Yes Yes Friend Mode, [c] Handicap and Fun, [d] uci_elo [a] Yes Chess960 Fritz and Chesster: Koenig Schwarz GNOME Chess: GNU Chess: GNU chess: Yes No No Knightmate, Capablanca, Gothic, Shatranj, Courier, Cylinder, Berolina No Hiarcs ...
In the early 1990s ChessGenius was "one of the first master-strength programs". [10] In an article comparing ChessGenius with Fritz in February 1994 Grandmaster and computer chess expert John Nunn wrote, "[m]y own opinion is that if raw playing strength is your dominant criterion, then go for Genius". [11]
X3D Fritz was a version of the Fritz chess program, which in November 2003 played a four-game human–computer chess match against world number one Grandmaster Garry Kasparov. The match was tied 2–2, with X3D Fritz winning game 2, Kasparov winning game 3 and drawing games 1 and 4.