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Fritz Chess 17 Steam Edition

Fritz Chess 17 Steam Edition

68 مثبت / 29 ریٹنگز | ورژن: 1.0.0

ChessBase GmbH

  • United States
    $59.99$59.99
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    $1.86$1.86
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گیم لوپ ایمولیٹر کے ساتھ PC پر Fritz Chess 17 Steam Edition ڈاؤن لوڈ کریں۔


Fritz Chess 17 Steam Edition، ایک مقبول سٹیم گیم ہے جسے ChessBase GmbH نے تیار کیا ہے۔ آپ PC پر کھیلنے کے لیے گیم لوپ کے ساتھ Fritz Chess 17 Steam Edition اور ٹاپ سٹیم گیمز ڈاؤن لوڈ کر سکتے ہیں۔ حاصل کریں' بٹن پر کلک کریں پھر آپ GameDeal پر تازہ ترین بہترین ڈیلز حاصل کر سکتے ہیں۔

Fritz Chess 17 Steam Edition اسٹیم گیم حاصل کریں۔

Fritz Chess 17 Steam Edition، ایک مقبول سٹیم گیم ہے جسے ChessBase GmbH نے تیار کیا ہے۔ آپ PC پر کھیلنے کے لیے گیم لوپ کے ساتھ Fritz Chess 17 Steam Edition اور ٹاپ سٹیم گیمز ڈاؤن لوڈ کر سکتے ہیں۔ حاصل کریں' بٹن پر کلک کریں پھر آپ GameDeal پر تازہ ترین بہترین ڈیلز حاصل کر سکتے ہیں۔

Fritz Chess 17 Steam Edition خصوصیات

At the turn of the century, Fritz fascinated the chess world with victories over Garry Kasparov and then-reigning World Champion Vladimir Kramnik. The "most popular chess program" (according to German magazine Der Spiegel) offers you everything you will need as a dedicated chess enthusiast, with innovative training methods for amateurs and professionals alike.

The neural chess engine "Fat Fritz"

In December 2017, a press release from Google shook the chess world to the core: its subsidiary Deep Mind built a neural network, dubbed Alpha Zero, which "learned" chess solely by playing millions of games against itself, yet was strong enough to beat Stockfish 8, a leading chess engine. This news was sobering and fascinating at the same time. Sobering in the sense that the decades old tradition of chess programming had been relegated to the shadows by a self-learning system. Fascinating because it was possible to hope that one could learn really new stuff about chess from this radical approach.

.

Nobody had expected that a cooperative effort by chess developers would soon make this technology generally available. The Open-Source- Project LCZero began to retrace the trail blazed by Google and in the meantime has acquired considerable strength. Suddenly a chess engine was available whose different analysis results provided new ideas on all fronts. LCZero too follows the Google philosophy, that the neural network only learns from games played against itself. 

The idea soon came to use our existing base of hundreds of thousands of good grandmaster games to shorten this learning process. This approach was followed logically by our longserving technical editor Albert Silver and based on the LCZero technology he trained a neural network for a whole year with GM games.

The result is so convincing that we are now publishing it as “Fat Fritz” along with Fritz17. As things stand, Fat Fritz defeats in a direct comparison all traditional chess programs and even LCZero. The moves suggested in analysis are often extremely human and planned. With a painfully practical limitation: Fat Fritz needs (like LCZero) a very high performance Nvidia graphics card (“GPU”) in order to achieve its full playing strength. Nevertheless, here for the rst time in many years we can record a real breakthrough in chess programming. Fat Fritz and LCZero are already beginning to change opening theory.

Methodical opening training

Every average human brain is light years ahead of neural networks when it comes to mastering everyday situations. However, it is in some ways tiresome imprinting on one’s own neural network knowledge about opening variations.

Therefore Fritz 17 has new functions to offer to considerably simplify the constructing, administration and above all the transfer to memory of an opening repertoire. What use is the finest variation tree if one can’t remember it? Fritz 17 introduces a repertoire administration which is not based on whole variations but on moves. You decide on a move: “at’s the one I want to play myself ” and thereupon the whole variation is taken over into your repertoire. The advantage: with some decisions and a few clicks you can set up a useable repertoire. This repertoire is online, i.e. it can be accessed immediately by any computer and on the web.

.

Drill and play

Once you have clicked together a repertoire in that way, the fun begins: you now learn it by drilling. To do so you play your variations and Fritz replies in such a way that, as far as possible, you remain within your repertoire. At first the moves come according to their frequency in theory. After some time it becomes clear what you have mastered properly and what not. The problematic systems are then repeated more often so that you can achieve certainty quickly with the minimum of effort. This system is known from the learning of foreign languages.

For it to be fun, Fritz measures the size of the theoretical area you have mastered and enters it into a ranking list as a number of points. Helpful for practice is also the fact that in your drilling when you reach the end of a variation you can decide if you want to carry on as a training game. Drilling can also be done with any variation tree you wish to load (traditional ChessBase repertoire), even with a sole game if you would like to learn it by heart.

Ready-made repertoires included

Included with Fritz 17 is access to pre-prepared up-to-date repertoires. You can either drill with these as they come or incorporate them into your own repertoire with the usual clicks to mark moves. ese ready-made repertoires can be found in each case at four levels: simple, club, tournament and professional. at saves work; you do not need to extract a simpler club-level version from full-fledged professional repertoire on your own.

.

Here are the highlights:

Now with “Fat Fritz“ * : An extremely strong neural net engine inspired by Alpha Zero, which produces human-like strategic analyses of world class quality.

Improved Fritz 17 engine with traditional brute force search and evaluations technology

Convenient one-click management of your opening repertoires

Opening training with success control, measure your progress with e-learning technology

Hundreds of ready-made repertoires included • “Blitz & Train“: Fritz generates tactical puzzles from your own blitz games

Perfect analysis of endgames with up to seven pieces, access to “Let‘s Check“ • Improved 3D chess boards thanks to real-time ray tracing**

*Fat Fritz is based on LCZero. LCZero is an open source project licensed through the GPL v3 with all due rights. Source code of LCZero and the modifications for Fat Fritz can be found at Github.

** Requires a powerful graphics card with NVIDIA chip

مزید دکھائیں

گیم لوپ ایمولیٹر کے ساتھ PC پر Fritz Chess 17 Steam Edition ڈاؤن لوڈ کریں۔

Fritz Chess 17 Steam Edition اسٹیم گیم حاصل کریں۔

Fritz Chess 17 Steam Edition، ایک مقبول سٹیم گیم ہے جسے ChessBase GmbH نے تیار کیا ہے۔ آپ PC پر کھیلنے کے لیے گیم لوپ کے ساتھ Fritz Chess 17 Steam Edition اور ٹاپ سٹیم گیمز ڈاؤن لوڈ کر سکتے ہیں۔ حاصل کریں' بٹن پر کلک کریں پھر آپ GameDeal پر تازہ ترین بہترین ڈیلز حاصل کر سکتے ہیں۔

Fritz Chess 17 Steam Edition خصوصیات

At the turn of the century, Fritz fascinated the chess world with victories over Garry Kasparov and then-reigning World Champion Vladimir Kramnik. The "most popular chess program" (according to German magazine Der Spiegel) offers you everything you will need as a dedicated chess enthusiast, with innovative training methods for amateurs and professionals alike.

The neural chess engine "Fat Fritz"

In December 2017, a press release from Google shook the chess world to the core: its subsidiary Deep Mind built a neural network, dubbed Alpha Zero, which "learned" chess solely by playing millions of games against itself, yet was strong enough to beat Stockfish 8, a leading chess engine. This news was sobering and fascinating at the same time. Sobering in the sense that the decades old tradition of chess programming had been relegated to the shadows by a self-learning system. Fascinating because it was possible to hope that one could learn really new stuff about chess from this radical approach.

.

Nobody had expected that a cooperative effort by chess developers would soon make this technology generally available. The Open-Source- Project LCZero began to retrace the trail blazed by Google and in the meantime has acquired considerable strength. Suddenly a chess engine was available whose different analysis results provided new ideas on all fronts. LCZero too follows the Google philosophy, that the neural network only learns from games played against itself. 

The idea soon came to use our existing base of hundreds of thousands of good grandmaster games to shorten this learning process. This approach was followed logically by our longserving technical editor Albert Silver and based on the LCZero technology he trained a neural network for a whole year with GM games.

The result is so convincing that we are now publishing it as “Fat Fritz” along with Fritz17. As things stand, Fat Fritz defeats in a direct comparison all traditional chess programs and even LCZero. The moves suggested in analysis are often extremely human and planned. With a painfully practical limitation: Fat Fritz needs (like LCZero) a very high performance Nvidia graphics card (“GPU”) in order to achieve its full playing strength. Nevertheless, here for the rst time in many years we can record a real breakthrough in chess programming. Fat Fritz and LCZero are already beginning to change opening theory.

Methodical opening training

Every average human brain is light years ahead of neural networks when it comes to mastering everyday situations. However, it is in some ways tiresome imprinting on one’s own neural network knowledge about opening variations.

Therefore Fritz 17 has new functions to offer to considerably simplify the constructing, administration and above all the transfer to memory of an opening repertoire. What use is the finest variation tree if one can’t remember it? Fritz 17 introduces a repertoire administration which is not based on whole variations but on moves. You decide on a move: “at’s the one I want to play myself ” and thereupon the whole variation is taken over into your repertoire. The advantage: with some decisions and a few clicks you can set up a useable repertoire. This repertoire is online, i.e. it can be accessed immediately by any computer and on the web.

.

Drill and play

Once you have clicked together a repertoire in that way, the fun begins: you now learn it by drilling. To do so you play your variations and Fritz replies in such a way that, as far as possible, you remain within your repertoire. At first the moves come according to their frequency in theory. After some time it becomes clear what you have mastered properly and what not. The problematic systems are then repeated more often so that you can achieve certainty quickly with the minimum of effort. This system is known from the learning of foreign languages.

For it to be fun, Fritz measures the size of the theoretical area you have mastered and enters it into a ranking list as a number of points. Helpful for practice is also the fact that in your drilling when you reach the end of a variation you can decide if you want to carry on as a training game. Drilling can also be done with any variation tree you wish to load (traditional ChessBase repertoire), even with a sole game if you would like to learn it by heart.

Ready-made repertoires included

Included with Fritz 17 is access to pre-prepared up-to-date repertoires. You can either drill with these as they come or incorporate them into your own repertoire with the usual clicks to mark moves. ese ready-made repertoires can be found in each case at four levels: simple, club, tournament and professional. at saves work; you do not need to extract a simpler club-level version from full-fledged professional repertoire on your own.

.

Here are the highlights:

Now with “Fat Fritz“ * : An extremely strong neural net engine inspired by Alpha Zero, which produces human-like strategic analyses of world class quality.

Improved Fritz 17 engine with traditional brute force search and evaluations technology

Convenient one-click management of your opening repertoires

Opening training with success control, measure your progress with e-learning technology

Hundreds of ready-made repertoires included • “Blitz & Train“: Fritz generates tactical puzzles from your own blitz games

Perfect analysis of endgames with up to seven pieces, access to “Let‘s Check“ • Improved 3D chess boards thanks to real-time ray tracing**

*Fat Fritz is based on LCZero. LCZero is an open source project licensed through the GPL v3 with all due rights. Source code of LCZero and the modifications for Fat Fritz can be found at Github.

** Requires a powerful graphics card with NVIDIA chip

مزید دکھائیں

پیش نظارہ

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معلومات

  • ڈویلپر

    ChessBase GmbH

  • تازہ ترین ورژن

    1.0.0

  • آخری تازہ کاری

    2020-07-29

  • قسم

    Steam-game

مزید دکھائیں

جائزے

  • gamedeal user

    Jul 29, 2020

    [h1]The best chess game/program. For tech-minded.[/h1] Which I had to refund since the Steam version has some serious flaws and devs don't answer any of the forum topics. Well, here's a well-earned downvote for you. IMPORTANT things to note about Steam Edition: 1) Doesn't work if Steam is in offline mode. At all. That's why I've got a refund. 2) The online feature is limited compared to the non-Steam version. All online features are removed.!.. [h1]The following is for the non-steam version which I have for free[/h1] I'm using it since version 14, it was always the best choice when you needed the desktop, offline-capable chess program. What makes it good for me is its rich functionality. To name a few: * You can add any chess AI engine you want, and test it, against other engines, offline or online with others, earning ELO by optimizing your code(if you're a developer) and the rest of your tech stack. * Engine Cloud and Engine donation: if you have some noticeable CPU power on your home server, you can rent it as an engine. Or if you just have some spare computation power, you can donate it for "points". * Real-time evaluation of your moves. The "engine" can give you bits of advice. But not useless ones like "best moves", but commenting about the particular pieces and places on the board, or when you're going to make a very bad move. * 2D board designs look very clean on FullHD display, and very customizable. Disadvantages: * Some say that interface is clunky, and there are bugs. But I'd say the interface is fine, it's a software, after all. And for bugs - I never had any major troubles. * Online feature isn't the strongest part of it.
  • gamedeal user

    Jul 30, 2020

    Really interesting program. First chess engine I have used. Think I will learn a lot from this software, I much prefer software running locally on my machine for stuff like this than websites, because not only is my internet not the greatest, I have had many times where I have been engrossed in learning/playing on a website for it to go down temporarily, and lose all interest in waiting for it to come back up. Not knocking free software like Stockfish, Lucas Chess and free websites like Lichess, but I really like this particular package. AFAIK you might be able to load all the included engines with Lucas Chess (Supposedly it comes with a bunch.) into Fritz and have a massive chess engine tournament with something like this for a fun experience. I would say my favorite things with the GUI are the analysis tools, openings books, and the guides that show what pieces are threatening what, as well as the playing features such as Easy Game and Friend Mode. I am not a complete novice at chess, played it when I was a teenager and was quite good at that time, but had an 8 year break away from it. But even when I was younger I played with more intuition than theoretical knowledge of how you should play, trying to get more of a handle on that now that I am significantly older. Rather than looking up openings online or constantly rereading books, I can do drills in Fritz, and it has a massive range for all sorts of skill levels. And I think things like it's blindfold mode and other tactics training modes are a really cool feature. I think in combination with books, YouTube, and other learning resource websites, this is a great small investment, and it's a perpetual license rather than a sub, so that's a plus. And it's a software and engine based on your PC so you are not relying on cloud technology.
  • gamedeal user

    Jul 31, 2020

    I bought the game, played with a few of the features. You get a database of about 1.5 million games. The engine can analyze the games for you. The standard edition does not include the complete opening training module. I mainly bought it because I wanted to open my games and then ask the computer to continue the game based on a different variation but to do that, I have to copy the whole board, close the window open the game again under "Easy Game" and then tell the computer to play from that position. The evaluation bar to evaluate if your move is good or not is confusing at best. It will only tell you which color the game favors. The game will not suggest you a better move as you play, it will only tell you which color is better. You need to finish the game and go into the "Analyze and Enter" module and then run a full analysis. Once this is done, you will get suggestions of better moves. As a training tool, I think it is a good software. Being able to take all the time in the world about making your next move is a luxury that is limited with human vs human gameplay and is perhaps a reason why I bought this software.
  • gamedeal user

    Aug 4, 2020

    Review for Fritz Chess 17 Steam Edition (english and french) 1. English With Fritz 17, in addition to the Fritz 17 engine, you get a completely new chess engine that was created with the help of a neural network based on the AlphaZero approach. There are also new exciting functions for creating and practicing opening repertoire. Based on LCZero technology, a neural network was trained with Grand Master games for over a year. The developers named the result Fat Fritz, which, however, needs a very powerful NVidea graphics card to achieve the full game strength. The engine also works on a processor of a commercially available personal computer, delivers very interesting results thanks to the neural network, but is actually up to two thousand times faster on the fast graphics card. Fritz 17 introduces repertoire management that is not based on entire variants but on trains. The Fat Fritz Engine refers to the community project Leela Zero (Lc0). Fat Fritz definitely focuses on analysis. With Fritz 17 and Fat Fritz, Chessbase offers every chess player the opportunity to participate in the new analysis techniques with little effort. Since the Fat Fritz program is based on a self-learning neural network, it is free of all templates. What promises success is preferred, regardless of what the theory thinks of it. On the Computer Chess Ratings List of November 23, 2019, Fat Fritz took first place with the impressive Elo score of 3617 points. High performance is already achieved with an RTX 2080 GPU. An RTX 2080 ti graphics card achieves an NPS performance of 37000. There are three Fat Fritz engine versions available: the one controlled by the main processor ("CPU") and an "Open CL" and a "CUDA" version. The latter two require an extra graphics processor in the computer, and only with one of these is the Fat Fritz engine interesting (a largely undocumented tip is that many AMD graphics cards and even the graphics cores built into modern Intel processors support "Open CL", the performance of the integrated graphics cores is low but still much higher than that of the CPU): Fritz 17 is in any case the first commercial program to contain a modified version of the "Leela Zero" Chess Engine. The GPU is not used to actually calculate. While the search is carried out on the CPU like any other engine, the GPU provides the assessments. But even with the best GPU, the search on the CPU only runs with two cores. Using more cores can even be counterproductive, because what is important is not how fast the CPU calculates, but how quickly the GPU can read the results of the neural networks. The classic engines can use two, four, 32 or 128 cores. And each additional core leads to higher computing power. Fat Fritz and Leela do not use additional CPU cores. The Engine Fat Fritz from the Fritz 17 program is the front runner in the CCRL Elo list and has a positive record against all tested programs. Fat Fritz against Leelenstein 11.1: +16 -11 =164 against Lc0 0.23.1 w42850: +17 -8 =167 against Stockfish 11 64-bit 4CPU: +19 -9 =72 against Allie 0.5 nn49921: +58 -3 =131 against Stoofvlees II a14: +51 -8 =121 2. French Avec Fritz 17, en plus du moteur Fritz 17, vous obtenez un tout nouveau moteur d'échecs qui a été créé à l'aide d'un réseau neuronal basé sur l'approche AlphaZero. Il existe également de nouvelles fonctions passionnantes pour créer et pratiquer le répertoire d'ouverture. Basé sur la technologie LCZero, un réseau de neurones a été formé aux jeux Grand Master pendant plus d'un an. Les développeurs ont nommé le résultat Fat Fritz, qui, cependant, a besoin d'une carte graphique NVidea très puissante pour atteindre toute la puissance du jeu. Le moteur fonctionne également sur un processeur d'un ordinateur personnel disponible dans le commerce, fournit des résultats très intéressants grâce au réseau neuronal, mais est en fait jusqu'à deux mille fois plus rapide sur la carte graphique rapide. Fritz 17 introduit une gestion de répertoire qui n'est pas basée sur des variantes entières mais sur des trains. Le Fat Fritz Engine fait référence au projet communautaire Leela Zero (Lc0). Fat Fritz se concentre définitivement sur l'analyse. Avec Fritz 17 et Fat Fritz, Chessbase offre à chaque joueur d'échecs la possibilité de participer aux nouvelles techniques d'analyse avec peu d'effort. Le programme Fat Fritz étant basé sur un réseau neuronal auto-apprenant, il est libre de tous les modèles. Ce qui promet le succès est préféré, indépendamment de ce que la théorie en pense. Sur la liste des classements des échecs informatiques du 23 novembre 2019, Fat Fritz a pris la première place avec l'impressionnant score Elo de 3617 points.Des performances élevées sont déjà atteintes avec un unité de traitement graphique RTX 2080. Une carte graphique RTX 2080 ti atteint une performance NPS de 37000. Il existe trois versions de moteur Fat Fritz disponibles: celle contrôlée par le processeur principal ("unité centrale de traitement") et une version "Open CL" et une version "CUDA". Les deux derniers nécessitent un processeur graphique supplémentaire dans l'ordinateur, et le moteur Fat Fritz n'est intéressant qu'avec l'un d'entre eux (un conseil largement non documenté est que de nombreuses cartes graphiques AMD et même les cœurs graphiques intégrés dans les processeurs Intel modernes prennent en charge "Open CL", les performances des cœurs graphiques intégrés sont faibles mais toujours bien supérieures à celles du unité centrale de traitement): Fritz 17 est en tout cas le premier programme commercial qui contient une version modifiée du "Leela Zero" Chess Engine. Le unité de traitement graphique n'est pas utilisé pour calculer réellement. Alors que la recherche est effectuée sur le unité centrale de traitement comme n'importe quel autre moteur, le unité de traitement graphique fournit les évaluations. Mais même avec le meilleur unité de traitement graphique, la recherche sur le unité centrale de traitement ne fonctionne qu'avec deux cœurs. Utiliser plus de cœurs peut même être contre-productif, car ce n'est pas la vitesse à laquelle le processeur calcule, mais la vitesse à laquelle le unité de traitement graphique peut lire les résultats des réseaux de neurones. Les moteurs classiques peuvent utiliser deux, quatre, 32 ou 128 cœurs. Et chaque noyau supplémentaire conduit à une puissance de calcul plus élevée. Fat Fritz et Leela n'utilisent pas de cœurs unité centrale de traitement supplémentaires. Le moteur Fat Fritz du programme Fritz 17 est le leader de la liste CCRL Elo et a un bilan positif contre tous les programmes testés. Fat Fritz contre Leelenstein 11.1: +16 -11 =164 contre Lc0 0.23.1 w42850: +17 -8 =167 contre Stockfish 11 64-bit 4CPU: +19 -9 =72 contre Allie 0.5 nn49921: +58 -3 =131 contre Stoofvlees II a14: +51 -8 =121
  • gamedeal user

    Aug 5, 2020

    Buyer Beware Although it is not clear, the product sold on Steam is a limited version of the full software. The feature I particularly wanted was the Opening Repertoire management tools. I carefully checked the description of the software on Steam and it clearly lists this as being available: "Methodical opening training ... The advantage: with some decisions and a few clicks you can set up a useable repertoire. This repertoire is online, i.e. it can be accessed immediately by any computer and on the web." "Here are the highlights: Convenient one-click management of your opening repertoires" Unfortunately, these tools have been removed from the Fritz software sold on Steam, indeed all of the Online functionality seems to be gone. I wouldn't have a problem with this provided these restrictions were made clear in the product description. However, they are not, indeed the text seems to be lifted directly from the Chessbase website giving you the impression you will have access to the full package.
  • gamedeal user

    Sep 3, 2020

    Don't waste your money. Steam version is missing functionality despite them charging full price. I spent a couple hours trying to figure out where the feature I bought the game for where, manual for the game on Steam is not for the steam version. Contacted steam support and they refused to refund because I'd "played" the game for 5 hours. Those 5 hours the game was sitting in the background while I tried to figure out where the missing features were, reading the 450 page manual and searching online. If you want the full experience including tactics and openings DON'T BUY ON STEAM. TBH will be the last time I buy a Steam game after dealing with Steam support.
  • gamedeal user

    Sep 11, 2020

    I do not understand the negative reviews. Five years ago I spent $99 on Houdini 4. It never authenticated me so for 5 years I had to authenticate my ID before I could play. Having this program on STEAM is perfect! I'm not a serious chess player so I have to acknowledge that there probably are some things that competitive, tournament-type, master-level players care about (like being able to look up what a guy did last week at a specific tournament), but the negative reviews are very misleading to the vast majority who would consider buying this. 1. The online functionality arguments. Again, I'm sure they are technically right, but I had no issue. I clicked from the main screen on the playchess.com option...within 10 seconds, i had "this week's video instruction by a grandmaster" and all kinds of online links...at the bottom of the screen (all within 10 secs), I was challenged to a game by 3 people, two from the US and one from Europe. Some links required a playchess subscription, which I guess the non-Steam version comes with 6 months...but I didn't miss it at all. And the 6 months would have gone by and it would have been nothing anyway so I don't really care about that. There's probably some cool training that only subscribers of playchess.com can get, but I don't want a 6 month teaser that only is trying to get me to make an annual subscription to some service that I don't truly care about (after the 6 months are up). It's just not a big deal for most people. Having the game itself available on Steam (where I don't need a CD to authenticate, or worry about installing it while I'm out of town at a hotel...Steam takes care of all those issues...easily outweighs the loss of a 6 months subscription to some chess website that I would never have subscribed to anyway. 2. The database...one negative review said that it didn't have one. Nope, it has a huge database and it's easily accessible from the main Home page...just click the "Database" button and it goes to the main database that comes with the program...1.5 million games...up until like mid 2019... It has all the RELEVANT GAMES. Just for fun, I searched for "Kasparov"...man, I could spend a year just studying the amount of games that came back. People who fret over whether a database is 1 million or 5 million are kinda mentally ill. Their illness prevents them from truly understanding what 1 million is in terms of mathematics, especially in the context of "chess games played". It's a gargantuan number. One could easily spend the rest of his life just studying the database that comes with this program. Nuff said. 3. Another negative review went on and on about "repertoires" He said it was false advertising because it wasn't on his version. He's wrong. It's there. It's in the "openings" and narrative box (the one with like 5 tabs up above)...the tabs are so many that they cascade...if you click the right arrow to the end, you'll see the "repertoires" button...I clicked it and verified that it works. I actually don't understand "repertoires"--to me, they just look like opening trees, but they clearly are integrated because I saw another area that also linked "repertoires" so I don't know what the guy was so upset about...it's there and I verified that it works...to be overly kind, I'll assume there's some aspect that's missing--but, again, the vast majority of people will never even know what that missing something is. It has a full openings functionality, including the repertoires aspect...you will only be limited by the amount of time you dedicate to learning the game...not by the software...get it? (And, on a similar note, $200 basketball shoes won't make you able to slam a ball, either.) 4. Finally, as a life statement: chess is one of those games that can be absolutely exhilarating--like deep in the middle game when the board is perfectly balanced and you see something that just feels brilliant (whether it actually is brilliant is almost beside the point)...chess can give us great satisfaction intellectually. It's a great GAME. As a non-serious player, I have spent all I ever will...I bought 10 very good books (From general books like How to Reassess Your Chess to specific books on defense/offense/openings/endgames/middlegame strategy, etc...I hope that I can say someday that I read them all. So far I'm 1/2 way through Tarrasch's "The Game of Chess".... I know that I have to work through those books to become the player I want to someday be. I'm limited by my study time, not by what I own. I'll never buy another book...I have enough for what I need for life. I bought a nice classic staunton wooden chess set and its smaller set for a portable wooden chess set that I have for the road. I'll never buy another chess set in my life. So when I say this is worth buying, I'm talking about in life. You'll always have grandmaster analysis at your fingertips. You'll be able to input games and analyze them move-by-move. Or you can work through a book and set-up positions to make sure you really know the lessons...so much you can do...(I'm putting Tarrasch's The Game of Chess into a database where I can go through each lesson with all the variations, by simply using my arrow keys on the board--so nice. This software is great to have it on Steam. I'm not the kind of person to buy chess software twice. I would have put up with the Houdini 4 authentication issue for years (because it was just an inconvenience...it worked great once it was opened...but this Steam integration was too good to be true. It's a great bonus that it has this exciting new AI (deep learning) approach. They had better support all the versions they have on Steam in perpetuity else my review changes quickly.
  • gamedeal user

    Nov 8, 2020

    I've enjoyed this version more than previous versions. I can have a casual game and win or lose at ELO ~1800-2000. That's probably where I'm at, it's fun without being frustrating. It allows me to become better without being overwhelmingly tough, as previous versions could be.
  • gamedeal user

    Jan 9, 2021

    Limited version
  • gamedeal user

    Jan 9, 2021

    UPDATED Changed to positive since, I have to admit, slowly finding out content is there, just hidden behind a really unclear and buggy - for me - interface! First I have to click "NO" on every prompt it pops up when I launch some of the modules or menus items (at least this is what's happening on my system...), then it seems, so far, everything runs, their website connection too - playchess - only thing you are logged in as guest with sort of limited privilege, which is fair, tbh. The Easy Game is what actually it says...easy with limited functionality...Then, if you want to access the full features, you can only via launching a game from the database or running the classic menu and then working from there ( as pointed out by Knusperzwieback in a reply to my review!) EDITED Okay, after a few tries, it seems that, when prompted by the system to allow to run the DLL related to the module, if you click NO, oddily the module starts: so far I've been able to run the Analyze during a game and the "enter & Analyze" a previously played game from the main interface...gonna give some more tries to see what it works and what it doesn't ----------------------------------------- ORIGINAL Beware, as many already stated, a stripped version of the software, which would be okay, since the price is lower than that of their website for the full program, BUT they just DON'T tell you on the product's description! I do hope they just did it due too a poorly managed and hastly adaptation of the software to be sold and run through Steam, but it's been stripped of all the online tools; probably they just copied the description from their website and pasted here and the manual too refers to the full version. I can live without the hassle of having to tackle with their online access, which I guess, since due to how they managed this thing, must be a real pain in XXX, but since they just carelessness stripped the software from the online part,you missing here some usefull tools. You realize how they poorly managed this version, trying to launch from the main interface some of the tools that should be here but they aren't: you got error messages for DLL missing, so they just simply took off many modules. What you get: FRITZ 17 engine, the 2020 games database (which however can be easily found on the web), standard opening books, and all the standard tools to play a plain game (clocks, notation window, history of live played moves related to the moves you are playing and such) What you DON'T get: all the content related to their webiste part - FAT FRITZ, the neural engine, the managing of your own opening repertoires, any training tool, final game analyzing, drills and everything related to that engine, and of course all the online part: matches and drills. To make it short, this is just a nice but simple chess game with a good engine, but lacking all the content that can assist you to train and improve your game other than playing matches and learn by yourself without any AI help.
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