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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.
Chess software comes in different forms. A chess playing program provides a graphical chessboard on which one can play a chess game against a computer. Such programs are available for personal computers, video game consoles, smartphones/tablet computers or mainframes/supercomputers.
Fritz (chess) Fritz and Chesster; Fritz Chess; X3D Fritz; G. Grandmaster Chess; H. How About A Nice Game of Chess? ... Mac Hack; MChess Pro; Microchess; O. Online ...
Computer chess IC bearing the name of developer Frans Morsch (see Mephisto). Chess machines/programs are available in several different forms: stand-alone chess machines (usually a microprocessor running a software chess program, but sometimes as a specialized hardware machine), software programs running on standard PCs, web sites, and apps for mobile devices.
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 ...
Battle Chess: n/a No No Yes No Battle Chess: Game of Kings: n/a No No Yes No Battle vs. Chess: Fritz: No No levels 1-9 Yes Chessaria: The Tactical Adventure: Chessaria AICE No No Yes Yes Yes Chess Assistant: Dragon, Rybka: Yes Yes multivariation, uci_elo [a] No Chess960 No Chessbase: Fritz: Yes Yes uci_elo [a] for analysis but no timed games ...
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]
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.