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Stockfish is a TCEC multiple-time champion and the current leader in trophy count. Ever since TCEC restarted in 2013, Stockfish has finished first or second in every season except one. Stockfish finished second in TCEC Season 4 and 5, with scores of 23–25 first against Houdini 3 and later against Komodo 1142 in the
Stockfish won game 56, but Leela won game 63, maintaining her lead. There followed two dramatic games. In game 65, Leela built up a winning position. Stockfish showed a +153 evaluation, indicating that it had found a forced line leading to an endgame tablebase win; indeed analysis with 7-piece tablebases showed that Leela's position was winning ...
Prince (Fairy) 1X,~ 1/2: FN: Fairy Chess problems (Jelliss, Simple Chess Variants) Combination of Ferz and Knight. Also known as Priest (Scirocco) or Dullahan (Fearful Fairies). Prince (Modern) 1 , o2> WFmfW2: Metamachy: Moves as a Mann (non-royal King) or as a Pawn, can be promoted like a Pawn. Prince Elephant (Betza) 1 , ~ 2X: WFA: Chess on a ...
After seven draws, Stockfish won the eighth game to win the match. [38] In Season 17 of TCEC, held in January–April 2020, Leela regained the championship by defeating Stockfish 52.5–47.5, scoring a remarkable six wins in the final ten games, including winning as both white and black in the same predetermined opening in games 95 and 96. [39]
Although the (1,1)-leaper is confined to one half of the board, and the (0,3)-leaper to one ninth, their combination can reach any square on the board. [ 10 ] When one of the combined pieces is a knight, the compound may be called a knighted piece.
The first multiprocessor version of Komodo was released in June 2013 as Komodo 5.1 MP. [10] This version was a major rewrite and a port of Komodo to C++11. A single-processor version of Komodo (which won the CCT15 tournament in February earlier that year) was released as a stand-alone product shortly before the 5.1 MP release.
1 Stockfish 42 9 33 0 25.5 Advance to Superfinal: 2 Leela Chess Zero 42 7 35 0 24.5 3 AllieStein 42 7 33 2 23.5 4 Stoofvlees 42 7 32 3 23 5 ... 13. c6 Nc5 14.
In AlphaZero's chess match against Stockfish 8 (2016 TCEC world champion), each program was given one minute per move. AlphaZero was flying the English flag, while Stockfish the Norwegian. [9] Stockfish was allocated 64 threads and a hash size of 1 GB, [2] a setting that Stockfish's Tord Romstad later criticized as suboptimal.